Journal
NURSING FORUM
Volume 57, Issue 3, Pages 374-381Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nuf.12694
Keywords
incivility; nursing students; resilience; stress
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Funding
- College of Nursing and Health Innovation (CONHI) at the University of Texas at Arlington
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This study aims to investigate the role of resilience and stress in peer incivility among prelicensure nursing students. The results indicate that the main effects of stress and resilience are not significantly correlated with low-level uncivil student behavior.
Although incivility in nursing education is linked with negative physical and psychological effects on students, it is unclear how resilience and stress interact and relate to student incivility. The purpose was to understand the role of resilience and stress with peer incivility in a sample of prelicensure nursing students during coronavirus disease 2019. The study design was cross-sectional and correlational. Data were from an online survey administered to undergraduate nursing students of one college of nursing in a southwestern US state during September-October 2020. In a sample of 490 students, ordinal regression model results supported that including a stress and resilience interaction term resulted in a nonsignificant effect of stress and resilience, as the main effect correlates on low-level uncivil student behavior. More research is needed to understand the prevalence of stress and resilience at different points in prelicensure nursing education so that targeted interventions can be developed and deployed to assist students.
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