Volume 14, Issue 5

Relationship between Resilience, Social Interaction Anxiety and Health Anxiety among Resident and Non-Resident female College Students

Author

Nagamani K M*1 and Ms.Priscilla A* 2

Abstract

The present study investigated the differences and the relationship between resilience, health anxiety, and social interaction anxiety among 330 resident and non-resident female college students. Convenient sampling was used. The participants completed the survey, which included the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, Health Anxiety Inventory, and Social Interaction Anxiety Scale. The statistical tools used were Independent sample t-tests and Pearson’s Product Moment Correlation. The results of the study indicated that there was no significant difference in resilience, social interaction anxiety, and health anxiety between resident and non-resident female college students and a significant positive relationship between health anxiety and social interaction anxiety among non-residents and residents. Furthermore, there was a significant negative correlation between resilience and health anxiety among resident students.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.62226/ijarst2024132545

PAGES : 1558-1564 | 5 VIEWS | 3 DOWNLOADS


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Nagamani K M*1 and Ms.Priscilla A* 2 | Relationship between Resilience, Social Interaction Anxiety and Health Anxiety among Resident and Non-Resident female College Students | DOI : https://doi.org/10.62226/ijarst2024132545

Journal Frequency: ISSN 2320-1126, Monthly
Paper Submission: Throughout the month
Acceptance Notification: Within 6 days
Subject Areas: Engineering, Science & Technology
Publishing Model: Open Access
Publication Fee: USD 60  USD 50
Publication Impact Factor: 6.76
Certificate Delivery: Digital

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