
Day Time Sleepiness and Quality of Life Predicts Perceived Stress among Youth
Author(s) -
Sandeep Panchal,
Monika Yadav
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of psychological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2630-5143
DOI - 10.30564/jpr.v3i2.3129
Subject(s) - perceived stress scale , epworth sleepiness scale , descriptive statistics , psychology , regression analysis , quality of life (healthcare) , analysis of variance , clinical psychology , demography , stress (linguistics) , medicine , statistics , psychiatry , mathematics , apnea , sociology , psychotherapist , polysomnography , philosophy , linguistics
The aim of the current study was to examine the predictive strength of Perceived Stress among Youth. The variables used in the current study were Day Time Sleepiness, Quality of Life and Perceived Stress. The sample consists of 150 Youth (81Male & 69 Female) with in age range of 18-24 years. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) (Johns, 1991), World Health Organization Quality of Life (WHO-BRIEF), and Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, 1983) were used. The data were analysed by using descriptive statistics i.e. Mean and SD, Pearson’s Product Moment correlation and step wise multiple regression analysis. The results indicated that Day Time Sleepiness (r = .56, p<.001) and Quality of Life (r = .52, p<.001) have significant positive relation with Perceived Stress among Youth. The step wise regression analysis found Day Time Sleepiness (R2 = .31, p<.001) and Psychological Health related Quality of Life (R2 = .39, p<.001) are the predictors of Perceived Stress. Both the variable accounts 39% of total variance in Perceived Stress among Youth.