Perceived sources and levels of stress, general self-efficacy and coping strategies in preclinical dental students
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Date
2018
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Publisher
Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Abstract
Dental education programs are known to be highly stressfuland stress can affect general health. The aims were to identify sources of stress among preclinical students and to evaluate their perceived levels of stress, self-efficacy and effective coping strategies in a private dental school. Onehundredpreclinical students in a Turkish private dental school were surveyed using dental environment stress (DES), perceived stress (PSS), general self-efficacy (G-SES) and brief coping scales (Brief-COPE). Age, gender, history of psychiatric treatment, factors that affected the choice of dentistry, choice rank of dental school, scholarship and income was recorded. Exams and grades' followed by Fear of failing course or year' were found to be the most stressprovoking factors. The most and the least stressprovoking DES domains were Workload' and Social stressors', respectively. Social stressors' affected male more than female (p<.05). The most and the leastcommon coping strategies were found to be Planning', and Drug', respectively. Female used Instrumental support' more than male (p<.05). Demographic factors had impact on the perceived stress factors and levels, as well as coping strategies. Unlike previous studies establishing high stress levels in dental students, preclinical students displayed moderate level of stress. Clinical dental education might be more responsible for creating stress.
Description
Dolekoglu, Zehra Semanur/0000-0002-9321-0749; Ersan, Nilufer/0000-0001-7039-7099
Keywords
Coping strategies, perceived stress, preclinical dental students, self-efficacy, undergraduate education
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
26
WoS Q
Q2
Scopus Q
Q2
Source
Volume
23
Issue
5
Start Page
567
End Page
577