Anxiety in veterinary surgical students: a quantitative study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Anxiety in veterinary surgical students : a quantitative study. / Langebæk, Rikke; Eika, Berit; Jensen, Asger Lundorff; Pedersen, Lene Tanggaard; Toft, Nils; Berendt, Mette.

In: Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, Vol. 39, No. 4, 2012, p. 331-340.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Langebæk, R, Eika, B, Jensen, AL, Pedersen, LT, Toft, N & Berendt, M 2012, 'Anxiety in veterinary surgical students: a quantitative study', Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 331-340. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1

APA

Langebæk, R., Eika, B., Jensen, A. L., Pedersen, L. T., Toft, N., & Berendt, M. (2012). Anxiety in veterinary surgical students: a quantitative study. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, 39(4), 331-340. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1

Vancouver

Langebæk R, Eika B, Jensen AL, Pedersen LT, Toft N, Berendt M. Anxiety in veterinary surgical students: a quantitative study. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 2012;39(4):331-340. https://doi.org/10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1

Author

Langebæk, Rikke ; Eika, Berit ; Jensen, Asger Lundorff ; Pedersen, Lene Tanggaard ; Toft, Nils ; Berendt, Mette. / Anxiety in veterinary surgical students : a quantitative study. In: Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 2012 ; Vol. 39, No. 4. pp. 331-340.

Bibtex

@article{6e631b197aef4743aec1d2f007fb1e24,
title = "Anxiety in veterinary surgical students: a quantitative study",
abstract = "The surgical educational environment is potentially stressful and this can negatively affect students' learning. The aim of this study was to investigate whether veterinary students' level of anxiety is higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course and if pre-surgical training in a Surgical Skills Lab (SSL) has an anxiety reducing effect. Investigations were carried out as a comparative study and a parallel group study. Potential participants were fourth-year veterinary students who attended a surgical course (Basic Surgical Skills) and a non-surgical course (Clinical Examination Skills); both courses were offered in multiple classes (with a total of 171 students in 2009 and 156 students in 2010). All classes in 2009 participated in the SSL stage of the Basic Surgical Skills course before performing live-animal surgery, and one class (28 students) in 2010 did not. Two validated anxiety questionnaires (Spielberger's state-trait anxiety inventory and Cox and Kenardy's performance anxiety questionnaire) were used. Anxiety levels were measured before the non-surgical course (111 students from 2009) and before live-animal surgery during the surgical course (153 students from 2009 and 28 students from 2010). Our results show that anxiety levels in veterinary students are significantly higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course (p",
author = "Rikke Langeb{\ae}k and Berit Eika and Jensen, {Asger Lundorff} and Pedersen, {Lene Tanggaard} and Nils Toft and Mette Berendt",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "331--340",
journal = "Journal of Veterinary Medical Education",
issn = "0748-321X",
publisher = "University of Toronto Press * Journals Division",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Anxiety in veterinary surgical students

T2 - a quantitative study

AU - Langebæk, Rikke

AU - Eika, Berit

AU - Jensen, Asger Lundorff

AU - Pedersen, Lene Tanggaard

AU - Toft, Nils

AU - Berendt, Mette

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The surgical educational environment is potentially stressful and this can negatively affect students' learning. The aim of this study was to investigate whether veterinary students' level of anxiety is higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course and if pre-surgical training in a Surgical Skills Lab (SSL) has an anxiety reducing effect. Investigations were carried out as a comparative study and a parallel group study. Potential participants were fourth-year veterinary students who attended a surgical course (Basic Surgical Skills) and a non-surgical course (Clinical Examination Skills); both courses were offered in multiple classes (with a total of 171 students in 2009 and 156 students in 2010). All classes in 2009 participated in the SSL stage of the Basic Surgical Skills course before performing live-animal surgery, and one class (28 students) in 2010 did not. Two validated anxiety questionnaires (Spielberger's state-trait anxiety inventory and Cox and Kenardy's performance anxiety questionnaire) were used. Anxiety levels were measured before the non-surgical course (111 students from 2009) and before live-animal surgery during the surgical course (153 students from 2009 and 28 students from 2010). Our results show that anxiety levels in veterinary students are significantly higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course (p

AB - The surgical educational environment is potentially stressful and this can negatively affect students' learning. The aim of this study was to investigate whether veterinary students' level of anxiety is higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course and if pre-surgical training in a Surgical Skills Lab (SSL) has an anxiety reducing effect. Investigations were carried out as a comparative study and a parallel group study. Potential participants were fourth-year veterinary students who attended a surgical course (Basic Surgical Skills) and a non-surgical course (Clinical Examination Skills); both courses were offered in multiple classes (with a total of 171 students in 2009 and 156 students in 2010). All classes in 2009 participated in the SSL stage of the Basic Surgical Skills course before performing live-animal surgery, and one class (28 students) in 2010 did not. Two validated anxiety questionnaires (Spielberger's state-trait anxiety inventory and Cox and Kenardy's performance anxiety questionnaire) were used. Anxiety levels were measured before the non-surgical course (111 students from 2009) and before live-animal surgery during the surgical course (153 students from 2009 and 28 students from 2010). Our results show that anxiety levels in veterinary students are significantly higher in a surgical course than in a non-surgical course (p

U2 - 10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1

DO - 10.3138/jvme.1111-111R1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23187026

VL - 39

SP - 331

EP - 340

JO - Journal of Veterinary Medical Education

JF - Journal of Veterinary Medical Education

SN - 0748-321X

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 43923358