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The Impact of Transitions Related to COVID-19 on Pharmacy Student Well-being

Nicholas E. Hagemeier, KariLynn Dowling-McClay

2020American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<b>Objective.</b> To characterize the impact of COVID-19 transitions on first professional year (P1) students’ domain-specific and overall well-being. <b>Methods.</b> All P1 students (N=74) enrolled at one college of pharmacy self-reported their career, community, financial, physical, social, and overall well-being on a weekly basis from January 6 through April 27, 2020. Parametric statistical tests and effect sizes were used to compare well-being scores pre-transition and post-transition and to compare well-being scores to a previous cohort of P1 students. <b>Results.</b> Mean well-being scores decreased when comparing pre-transition vs post-transition scores, with effect sizes ranging from d<sub>av</sub>=.16 for financial well-being to d<sub>av</sub>=.84 for social well-being. The average percent of students that reported struggling increased by 86.1% (16.8% vs 31.2%) post-transition, and the average percent of students that reported suffering post-transition was 351% higher (1.3% vs 6%) than pre-transition. <b>Conclusion.</b> Pharmacy students9 domain specific and overall well-being significantly decreased with COVID-19-related transitions. The percentage of students reporting struggling or suffering significantly increased post-transition.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PharmacyWell-being2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)PsychologyMedicineVirologyFamily medicineInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)PsychotherapistDiseaseOutbreakHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutHealth and Well-being StudiesCOVID-19 and Mental Health
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