Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology

The aim of this study is to investigate the emotional responses of nursing students to the COVID-19 pandemic and the characteristics of these responses using the Q-methodology. The focus of the Q-methodology is to discover research participants’ subjective viewpoints. In May 2021, 50 Korean nursing...

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Main Author: Mihyeon Seong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Healthcare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1080
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spelling doaj-39bfb28756bb4d3b8e75964ac4fd9b8f2021-08-26T13:48:03ZengMDPI AGHealthcare2227-90322021-08-0191080108010.3390/healthcare9081080Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-MethodologyMihyeon Seong0Department of Nursing, Changshin University, Changwon 51352, KoreaThe aim of this study is to investigate the emotional responses of nursing students to the COVID-19 pandemic and the characteristics of these responses using the Q-methodology. The focus of the Q-methodology is to discover research participants’ subjective viewpoints. In May 2021, 50 Korean nursing students from first year to fourth year were selected to participate in the study, and data were collected by asking them to classify 37 selected Q-statements in a normal distribution on a 9-point scale. In the final analysis, a P-sample of 38 nursing students was used. The emotional responses of the Korean nursing students were categorized into four types: self-protection (Type 1), pessimism about the current situation (Type 2), realistic optimism (Type 3), and developmental-seeking (Type 4). The four factors accounted for 39% of the total variance. The individual explanatory powers of the four factors were 8%, 12%, 13%, and 6%, respectively. Thus, the study explored the subjectivity of emotional responses of Korean nursing students to the pandemic. The study recommends considering the results for intervention programs that are designed to prepare nursing students for future health crises and pandemics.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1080Q-methodologynursing studentspandemicemotional responses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mihyeon Seong
spellingShingle Mihyeon Seong
Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
Healthcare
Q-methodology
nursing students
pandemic
emotional responses
author_facet Mihyeon Seong
author_sort Mihyeon Seong
title Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
title_short Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
title_full Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
title_fullStr Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
title_full_unstemmed Korean Nursing Students’ Emotional Response Types to Pandemic: Application of Q-Methodology
title_sort korean nursing students’ emotional response types to pandemic: application of q-methodology
publisher MDPI AG
series Healthcare
issn 2227-9032
publishDate 2021-08-01
description The aim of this study is to investigate the emotional responses of nursing students to the COVID-19 pandemic and the characteristics of these responses using the Q-methodology. The focus of the Q-methodology is to discover research participants’ subjective viewpoints. In May 2021, 50 Korean nursing students from first year to fourth year were selected to participate in the study, and data were collected by asking them to classify 37 selected Q-statements in a normal distribution on a 9-point scale. In the final analysis, a P-sample of 38 nursing students was used. The emotional responses of the Korean nursing students were categorized into four types: self-protection (Type 1), pessimism about the current situation (Type 2), realistic optimism (Type 3), and developmental-seeking (Type 4). The four factors accounted for 39% of the total variance. The individual explanatory powers of the four factors were 8%, 12%, 13%, and 6%, respectively. Thus, the study explored the subjectivity of emotional responses of Korean nursing students to the pandemic. The study recommends considering the results for intervention programs that are designed to prepare nursing students for future health crises and pandemics.
topic Q-methodology
nursing students
pandemic
emotional responses
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1080
work_keys_str_mv AT mihyeonseong koreannursingstudentsemotionalresponsetypestopandemicapplicationofqmethodology
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