Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of Metaverse Cultural Communication on the Mental Health of International Students in China: Highlighting Effects of Healthcare Anxiety and Cyberchondria

Jifeng Li

2022American Journal of Health Behavior24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Objectives: Students' mental health issues often adversely affect their physical as well as emotional well- being. Mental health includes much more than the absence of mental illnesses or diseases. The current study evaluated international students' mental health through a cultural communication approach in Metaverse to examine the moderating influences of cyberchondria and healthcare anxiety in the context of China. The idea of virtual reality in the Metaverse is currently one of the world's most significant and contentious issues. It has influenced the growth of the Internet, which directly affects the physical world. Methods: The data extraction method employed in the study was the questionnaire method, distributed to the Chinese Students. Various units for the variables were used in the questionnaire development, which aided in assessing the variable using measurement scales. Results: The findings showed a substantial connection between internal Chinese students at medical universities' mental health and cross-cultural dialogue in the Metaverse. Healthcare anxiety was observed to have a significant moderating effect, but cyberchondria had a negligible effect on student mental health and cultural communication in the Metaverse. Conclusion: The current study would help foster cross-cultural interaction among international and home-country students to foster a better interchange of cultural values.

Topics & Concepts

Mental healthMetaverseContext (archaeology)PsychologyChinaAnxietyStructural equation modelingApplied psychologySocial psychologyClinical psychologyPsychiatryComputer sciencePolitical scienceVirtual realityLawArtificial intelligenceMachine learningBiologyPaleontologyPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsCOVID-19 and Mental HealthLeadership, Courage, and Heroism Studies