The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on College Student’s Stress and Physical Activity Levels

Authors

  • Jonathan R. Anderson Oral Roberts University
  • Myra J. Bloom Oral Roberts University
  • Gladys Y.X. Chen Oral Roberts University
  • Scarlet R. Jost Oral Roberts University
  • Donald P. Keating III Oral Roberts University
  • Andrew S.I.D. Lang Oral Roberts University https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9922-1414
  • Nancy V. Mankin Oral Roberts University
  • Ericka R. McMahan Oral Roberts University
  • Jonathan A. Merheb Oral Roberts University
  • Philip P. Nelson Oral Roberts University
  • Joshua C. Nnaji Oral Roberts University
  • Enrique F. Valderrama-Araya Oral Roberts University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18061/bhac.v6i1.8670

Keywords:

Coronavirus, college students, COVID-19, sedentary behavior, perceived stress, mental health, exercise, wearables, Fitbits

Abstract

Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic adversely disrupted university student educational experiences worldwide, with consequences that included increased stress levels and unhealthy sedentary behavior.

Aim: This study aimed to quantify the degree of impact that COVID-19 had on the levels of physical activity and stress of university students by utilizing wearable fitness tracker data and standard stress survey instrument scores before and during the pandemic.

Methods: We collected Fitbit heart rate and physical activity data, and the results of a modified Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) stress survey from 2,987 university students during the Fall 2019 (residential instruction; before COVID-19) and Fall 2020 (hybrid instruction; during COVID-19) semesters.

Results: We found indicators of increased sedentary behavior during the pandemic. There was a significant decrease in both the levels of physical activity as measured by mean daily step count (↓636 steps/day; p = 1.04 · 10-9) and minutes spent in various heart rate zones (↓58 minutes/week; p = 2.20 · 10-16). We also found an increase in stressors during the pandemic, primarily from an increase in the number of students who experienced the “death of a close family member” (38.8%), with the number even higher for the population of students who opted to stay home and attend classes virtually (41.4%).

Conclusions: This study quantifies the decrease in levels of physical activity and notes an increase in the number of students who experienced the death of a close family member, a known stressor, during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings allow for more informed student-health-focused interventions related to the COVID-19 pandemic disruptions experienced by academic communities worldwide.

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Published

2022-07-14

How to Cite

Anderson, J. R., Bloom, M. J., Chen, G. Y., Jost, S. R., Keating III, D. P., Lang, A. S., … Valderrama-Araya, E. F. (2022). The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on College Student’s Stress and Physical Activity Levels. Building Healthy Academic Communities Journal, 6(1), 9–21. https://doi.org/10.18061/bhac.v6i1.8670

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Section

Feature Articles