1.Homesickness, Anxiety, Depression among Pakistani International Students in Indonesia during Covid-19
Shahzad Shoukat ; Cyuzuzo Callixte ; Jusak Nugraha ; Theresia Indah Budhy ; Tuyishimire Irene
ASEAN Journal of Psychiatry 2021;22(7):1-8
Introduction:
International students are exposed to multiple mental health crises due to social,
environmental and culture shocks in foreign lands but it gets worse in presence of lifethreatening
disease outbreak. This research was conducted to evaluate the homesickness, anxiety and depression among Pakistani international students in Indonesia during Covid-19 Outbreak. The Methodology conducted on 86 random students that are pursuing their studies in different public and private universities in Indonesia. The data were collected by distributing goggle forms via email and social media groups and the responses from the respondents were recorded and analysed statistically.
Results:
The study findings revealed that there is a correlation between Covid-19 pandemic and the development of various mental health crises where 33 students (38.37%) developed homesickness, 11 students (12.79%) developed anxiety and 2 students (2.33%) manifested low-grade depression. Homesickness was outstandingly observed in females (72.72%) whereas anxiety was highly reported in males (90.90%).The study findings demonstrated that there is a strong negative correlation between student financial statuses and the development of homesickness (r:-0.977, P:0.023) and anxiety (r:-0.944, P:0.056).
Conclusion
All in all, the fear to contract coronavirus, lockdowns, financial instability, death toll of citizens and medical professionals, run out of medical facilities and social media hoaxes are significant risk factors of mental health crisis among Pakistani international students in Indonesia.