1. Teaching Anxiety, Stress and Resilience During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Evaluating the Vulnerability of Academic Professionals in Mexico Through the Adapted COVID-19 Stress Scales
- Author
-
Erika Zuñiga-Violante, Gerardo R. Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo Salvador Romo-Cardenas, Jose Francisco Islas, Daniel Arrellanos Soto, Hector Franco-Villareal, Gener Avilez-Rodriguez, Juan Luis Delgado-Gallegos, and María de los Ángeles Cosío-León
- Subjects
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Vulnerability ,Anxiety ,resilience to COVID stress in academia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Stress (linguistics) ,Pandemic ,medicine ,stress in academic professionals ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Resilience (network) ,Mexico ,Pandemics ,media_common ,Original Research ,anxiety during COVID ,SARS-CoV-2 ,allergology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Traumatic stress ,COVID-19 ,Anxiety stress ,ACSS in academic professionals ,adapted COVID-stress scales ,Resilience, Psychological ,Mental health ,Mental Health ,Preparedness ,Xenophobia ,Psychological resilience ,Public Health ,medicine.symptom ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,School Teachers ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Stress, Psychological ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
To mitigate the COVID-19 infection, many world governments endorsed the cessation of non-essential activities, such as the school attendance, forcing a shift of the teaching model to the virtual classroom. From this shift, several changes in the teaching paradigm derived, in addition to the COVID-19 pandemic, which could have an impact in academic professional's mental health. In the present work we show the application of a modified version of the adapted COVID-19 stress scales (ACSS) which also included teaching anxiety and preparedness, and resilience for academic professionals in Mexico. These scales were applied during the unprecedented transformation of the education system undergone in the COVID-19 quarantine. Most of the studied variables: gender, age, academic degree, household occupants, having a disease, teaching level, teaching mode, work hours, resilience, teaching anxiety and preparedness, and fear of being an asymptomatic patient (FOBAP), showed significant statistical correlation between each other (p < 0.050) and to the 6 areas of the ACSS (danger, contamination, social economical, xenophobia, traumatic stress, and compulsive checking). Our results further showed that the perceived stress and anxiety fell into the category of Absent to Mild, with only the danger section of the ACSS falling into the Moderate category. Finally, the resilience generated throughout the quarantine was very high, which seems to be a predictor of adaptation the academic professional has undergone to cope with stress.
- Published
- 2021