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Academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students in South Africa: a cross-sectional study
by
Tlhole, Dipuo Aniekie
, Senekal, Abraham Carel Greyling
, Henrico, Karien
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic stress
/ Allied Health Occupations Education
/ Allied Health Personnel
/ Analysis
/ At Risk Students
/ Burnout
/ Communication channels
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Confidentiality
/ Construct Validity
/ Coping
/ Correlation
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Cultural Context
/ Data Analysis
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Educational aspects
/ Educational Assessment
/ Educational Environment
/ Emergency Medical Care
/ Emergency medicine
/ Environmental Influences
/ Ethics
/ Expectation
/ Fatigue (Biology)
/ Feedback (Response)
/ Gender
/ Health Occupations
/ Health professions education
/ Higher education
/ Interpersonal Relationship
/ Junior high school students
/ Language of Instruction
/ Learning environment optimization
/ Medical Education
/ Medical Services
/ Medical students
/ Paramedic student
/ Paramedics
/ Participation
/ Professions
/ Psychological aspects
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Student well-being
/ Students
/ Study and teaching
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
/ Workloads
2026
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Academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students in South Africa: a cross-sectional study
by
Tlhole, Dipuo Aniekie
, Senekal, Abraham Carel Greyling
, Henrico, Karien
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic stress
/ Allied Health Occupations Education
/ Allied Health Personnel
/ Analysis
/ At Risk Students
/ Burnout
/ Communication channels
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Confidentiality
/ Construct Validity
/ Coping
/ Correlation
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Cultural Context
/ Data Analysis
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Educational aspects
/ Educational Assessment
/ Educational Environment
/ Emergency Medical Care
/ Emergency medicine
/ Environmental Influences
/ Ethics
/ Expectation
/ Fatigue (Biology)
/ Feedback (Response)
/ Gender
/ Health Occupations
/ Health professions education
/ Higher education
/ Interpersonal Relationship
/ Junior high school students
/ Language of Instruction
/ Learning environment optimization
/ Medical Education
/ Medical Services
/ Medical students
/ Paramedic student
/ Paramedics
/ Participation
/ Professions
/ Psychological aspects
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Student well-being
/ Students
/ Study and teaching
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
/ Workloads
2026
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Academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students in South Africa: a cross-sectional study
by
Tlhole, Dipuo Aniekie
, Senekal, Abraham Carel Greyling
, Henrico, Karien
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic stress
/ Allied Health Occupations Education
/ Allied Health Personnel
/ Analysis
/ At Risk Students
/ Burnout
/ Communication channels
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Confidentiality
/ Construct Validity
/ Coping
/ Correlation
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Cultural Context
/ Data Analysis
/ Data collection
/ Decision making
/ Education
/ Educational aspects
/ Educational Assessment
/ Educational Environment
/ Emergency Medical Care
/ Emergency medicine
/ Environmental Influences
/ Ethics
/ Expectation
/ Fatigue (Biology)
/ Feedback (Response)
/ Gender
/ Health Occupations
/ Health professions education
/ Higher education
/ Interpersonal Relationship
/ Junior high school students
/ Language of Instruction
/ Learning environment optimization
/ Medical Education
/ Medical Services
/ Medical students
/ Paramedic student
/ Paramedics
/ Participation
/ Professions
/ Psychological aspects
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Student well-being
/ Students
/ Study and teaching
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
/ Workloads
2026
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Academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students in South Africa: a cross-sectional study
Journal Article
Academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students in South Africa: a cross-sectional study
2026
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Overview
Background
Academic stress is widely reported among students in higher education, particularly within health professions programmes that combine intensive academic workloads with early clinical exposure. While stress among medical and nursing students has been well documented, comparatively little is known about the nature and distribution of academic stress among emergency medical care (paramedic) students, particularly in low- and middle-income contexts.
Method
A cross-sectional survey was conducted among first- to fourth-year emergency medical care students at a South African university. Participants completed a web-based questionnaire comprising demographic items and the validated Student Stress Inventory (SSI), which assesses stress across physical, interpersonal, academic, and environmental domains. Descriptive statistics were used to summarise stress levels, and inferential analyses were conducted to explore differences by gender and year of study, as well as associations between stress domains.
Results
Most participants reported moderate academic stress, with stress distributed across academic, physical, interpersonal, and environmental domains. No statistically significant differences in overall stress were observed by gender or year of study. Moderate positive associations were identified between academic stress and both the physical and environmental stress domains.
Conclusion
These findings provide contextually grounded evidence of academic stress patterns in paramedic education and contribute to the international discourse on student well-being in health professions education. Understanding the multidimensional nature of academic stress may inform the design of supportive curricula and institutional strategies aimed at promoting student well-being across diverse educational contexts.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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