Publication date: Jun 09, 2025
In health emergencies such as pandemics, nurses are on the front lines, thus increasing their risk of psychological distress. The mental health of nursing students may also deteriorate as a result of changes in learning and clinical practice environments. We measured the psychological effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and electronic health (eHealth) literacy among nursing students and identified associated factors. We used a cross-sectional design to analyze students studying at 2 nursing schools in the United States and TcFCrkiye (N = 887 nursing students). We used the Fear of COVID-19 Scale (range, 7-35) and the Coronavirus Anxiety Scale (range, 5-20) to measure fear and anxiety of the COVID-19 pandemic, and we used the Electronic Health Literacy Scale (range, 8-40) to measure eHealth literacy among students from April through June 2022. We conducted 1-way multivariate analysis of variance (F) to examine the relationships among variables, with P ≤ . 05 considered as significant. Students had mean scores of 30. 7 for eHealth literacy, 14. 1 for Fear of COVID-19 Scale, and 6. 2 for Coronavirus Anxiety Scale. Scores for eHealth literacy varied according to the students’ school, academic level, and employment but were generally high. Sex (Wilks λ = 0. 952; F = 14. 787; P
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Coronavirus | anxiety |
June | eHealth literacy |
Literacy | fear |
Nurses | mental health |
Pandemic | nursing student |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 Pandemic |
disease | MESH | emergencies |
disease | MESH | psychological distress |
disease | MESH | Anxiety |
disease | MESH | Long Covid |