Correlation Between Anxiety Levels and The Incidence of Nocturia among Faculty of Agricultural Technology Students, Brawijaya University during COVID-19 Pandemic
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11594/jk-risk.03.2.3Keywords:
Nocturia, Anxiety, Students, Sleep disorderAbstract
Background: Nocturia is the most common and disturbing symptom in lower urinary tract disorders. Younger people, particularly college students, are more affected by nocturia, which can have a negative impact on their academic performance. A study revealed that anxiety often occurs simultaneously with nocturia and has a reciprocal association.
Aim: The purpose of this study is to examine the frequency of nocturia in agricultural technology students during the COVID-19 pandemic and the association between anxiety levels and nocturia incidence.
Methods: Analytic observational study with cross sectional design. The Google form questionnaire contains questions about student characteristics data, the ICIQ-N questionnaire contains the frequency of nocturia and disturbance scores, and the ZSAS questionnaire for anxiety levels. Data analyzed used Chi Square test to analyze the relationship between anxiety level and nocturia.
Results: The results showed that there was an insignificant relationship between anxiety levels (p=0.307). Nocturia is a symptom that is often experienced by students. The disturbing score increases along with the severity of nocturia.
Conclusion: There was a weak association between anxiety level and nocturia.
Downloads
References
Bosch JL, Weiss JP. The prevalence dan causes of nocturia. J Urol. 2013;189(1 Suppl):S86–S92.
Wang Y, Hu H, Xu K, Zhang X, Wang X, Na Y, et al. Prevalence, risk factors, dan symptom bother of nocturia: a population-based survey in China. World J Urol. 2015;33(5):677-83.
Przydacz, M., Skalski, M., Golabek, T., Sobański, J.A., Klasa, K., Świerkosz, A., Dudek, D. dan Chłosta, P., 2018. Nocturia has no impact on depression severity in patients suffering from depression but correlates with sleep quality. Psychiatr Pol, 52, pp.835-42.
Crocq, M.A., 2015. A history of anxiety: from Hippocrates to DSM. Dialogues in clinical neuro-science, 17(3), p.319.
Bliwise, D.L., Wagg, A. dan Sdan, P.K., 2019. Nocturia: a highly prevalent disorder with multifaceted consequences. Urology, 133, pp.3-13.
Adityagama M and Rahardjo HE. The use of consultation on Incontinence Questioner – Nocturia (ICIQ-N) in Indonesian population: an affirmation study [version 1; peer review: 2 approved with reserva-tions]. F1000Research 2022, 11:1043
Setyowati, A., Chung, M.-H., & Yusuf, A. (2019). Development of self-report assessment tool for anxiety among adolescents: Indonesian version of the Zung self-rating anxiety scale. Journal of Public Health in Africa, 10(s1).
Cornu, J.N., Abrams, P., Chapple, C.R., Dmo-chowski, R.R., Lemack, G.E., Michel, M.C., Tubaro, A. dan Madersbacher, S., 2012. A contemporary assessment of nocturia: definition, epidemiology, pathophysiology, dan management—a systematic review dan meta-analysis. European urology, 62(5), pp.877-890.
Moon, S., Chung, H.S., Yu, J.M., Ko, K.J., Choi, D.K., Kwon, O., Lee, Y.G. dan Cho, S.T., 2019. The association between obesity dan the nocturia in the US population. International neurourology journal, 23(2), p.169.
Daryanto, B., Purnomo, A.F., Budaya, T.N., Prayitnaningsih, S. and Dewi, N.A., 2022. INDO-NESIAN PEOPLE RISK FACTORS OF NOCTURIA (TWO OR MORE VOIDS PER NIGHT) OLDER THAN 40 YEARS-OLD. Malang Neurology Jour-nal, 8(2), pp.104-108.
Febriyanti, E., & Mellu, A. (2020). Tingkat Kecemasan Mahasiswa Keperawatan Dalam Menghadapi Pandemi Covid-19 di Kota Kupang. Jurnal Nursing 11 (3).
Hoque, M.N., Hannan, A., Imran, S., Alam, M.A., Matubber, B. and Saha, S.M., 2021. Anxiety and its determinants among undergraduate students during E-learning in Bangladesh amid covid-19. Journal of Affective Disorders Reports, 6, p.100241.
Kulsoom, B. and Afsar, N.A., 2015. Stress, anxiety, and depression among medical students in a multiethnic setting. Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment, 11, p.1713.
Astutik, E., Sebayang, S.K., Puspikawati, S.I., Tama, T.D., Sintha, D.M. dan Dewi, K., 2020. Depression, anxiety, dan stress among students in newly established remote university campus in Indonesia. Malaysian Journal of Medicine dan Health Sciences, 16(1), pp.270-277.
Mardea, N.A., WIDAYANTI, A.W. dan KRISTINA, S.A., 2020. Stress level comparison between pharmacy students dan non-pharmacy students in Indonesia. International Journal of Pharmaceutical Research, 12(3).
Bower, W.F., Whishaw, D.M. and Khan, F., 2017. Nocturia as a marker of poor health: causal associations to inform care. Neurourology and urodynamics, 36(3), pp.697-705.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors can enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges and earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access).










