Elsevier

Journal of Adolescent Health

Volume 67, Issue 3, September 2020, Pages 369-375
Journal of Adolescent Health

Original article
A Descriptive Study of COVID-19–Related Experiences and Perspectives of a National Sample of College Students in Spring 2020

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.06.009Get rights and content

Abstract

Purpose

This is one of the first surveys of a USA-wide sample of full-time college students about their COVID-19–related experiences in spring 2020.

Methods

We surveyed 725 full-time college students aged 18–22 years recruited via Instagram promotions on April 25–30, 2020. We inquired about their COVID-19–related experiences and perspectives, documented opportunities for transmission, and assessed COVID-19's perceived impacts to date.

Results

Thirty-five percent of participants experienced any COVID-19–related symptoms from February to April 2020, but less than 5% of them got tested, and only 46% stayed home exclusively while experiencing symptoms. Almost all (95%) had sheltered in place/stayed primarily at home by late April 2020; 53% started sheltering in place before any state had an official stay-at-home order, and more than one-third started sheltering before any metropolitan area had an order. Participants were more stressed about COVID-19's health implications for their family and for American society than for themselves. Participants were open to continuing the restrictions in place in late April 2020 for an extended period of time to reduce pandemic spread.

Conclusions

There is substantial opportunity for improved public health responses to COVID-19 among college students, including for testing and contact tracing. In addition, because most participants restricted their behaviors before official stay-at-home orders went into effect, they may continue to restrict movement after stay-at-home orders are lifted, including when colleges reopen for in-person activities, if they decide it is not yet prudent to circulate freely. The public health, economic, and educational implications of COVID-19 are continuing to unfold; future studies must continue to monitor college student experiences and perspectives.

Keywords

College students
COVID-19
Epidemiology
Health behavior
Public health
USA

Cited by (0)

Conflicts of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Disclaimer: Study funders had no role in study design; data collection, interpretation, or analysis; writing the report; or the decision to submit this manuscript for publication. A.K.C. and L.T.H. wrote the first draft of the manuscript; no funding was provided to the authors or anyone else to produce the manuscript.

View Abstract