COVID-19 Anxiety, Perceived Social Support, and Self Efficacy of Health Protocol Implementation: A Cross-Sectional Study among University Staffs
Penulis/Author
IZZATUL ALIFAH SIFAI (1); dr. Nur Arfian, Ph.D. (2); Dr. Supriyati, S.Sos., M.Kes. (3)
Tanggal/Date
2022
Kata Kunci/Keyword
Abstrak/Abstract
Self-efficacy has been proven to be an important part of health promotion activities to improve compliance in the implementation of health protocols (COVID-19 preventive behavior). This study was aimed to analyze the correlation of anxiety toward coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), perceived social support, and self-efficacy in implementing health protocols among university staffs. Methods: A cross-sectional study was carried out to analyze self-efficacy of the implementation of health protocols among university staffs in a public university in Yogyakarta. A pre-tested questionnaire was used to collect data through Google form in May–June 2021. Data were analyzed
using chi-square and logistic regression (p < 0.05). Results: From the 230 participants, 61.74% had low self-efficacy
in implementing health protocols. COVID-19 related anxiety (p = 0.002) and perceived social support (p = 0.001)
were associated with self-efficacy in implementing health protocols. The results of the binary logistic regression
indicated that these two factors affected self-efficacy by 10.1%, while other influences were 89.9%. Conclusion:
Respondents with low-perceived social support were 3.7 times less likely to have low self-efficacy in implementing
health protocols. The results highlight the importance of social support to enhance self-efficacy in the implementation
of health protocols among university staffs.
Rumpun Ilmu
Kesehatan Masyarakat
Bahasa Asli/Original Language
English
Level
Internasional
Status
Dokumen Karya
No
Judul
Tipe Dokumen
Aksi
1
Bukti Korespondensi Covid-19 Anxiety_Sifai et al 22.pdf
[PAK] Bukti Korespondensi Penulis
2
Full document - COVID-19 Anxiety, Perceived Social Support, and Self-efficacy.pdf