AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

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Online health education improved COVID-19 knowledge and reduced anxiety

A pregnant woman in a striped sleeveless top stands at a desk with a laptop computer in a home interior, appearing engaged with the screen.
Image Credit: Photo by shaila19 on Pixabay (SourceLicense)

AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

This page presents an AI-generated summary of a published research paper. The original authors did not write or review this article. See full disclosure ↓

⚠️ This article summarizes published research and is intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice or clinical guidance.

Health Medicine and Therapeutics·2026-03-07·Peer-reviewed·View original paper ↗·Follow this topic (RSS)
Publication Signals show what we were able to verify about where this research was published.STANDARDAvailable publication signals for this source were verified. Publication Signals reflect the source’s verifiable credentials, not the quality of the research.

Fewer signals were independently confirmable for this source. That reflects the limits of what’s on record — not a judgment about the research.

  • ✔ No retraction or integrity flags
Research area:MedicineObstetrics and GynecologyMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum

What the study found

Online health education (OHE, education delivered over the internet) was associated with better COVID-19 knowledge and lower pregnancy anxiety in first-time pregnant women during the post-pandemic period.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors say the study addresses pregnant women's need for hospital-based online health education to learn COVID-19-related knowledge and maintain their health.

What the researchers tested

The researchers used a quasi-experimental, non-equivalent group, pre-test and post-test design with 70 qualified subjects recruited purposively from the obstetrics clinic of a tertiary hospital. The experimental group received OHE online, while the control group received routine health education from physicians and nurses during prenatal check-ups.

What worked and what didn't

After OHE, the experimental group showed significantly improved COVID-19 knowledge and significantly relieved pregnancy anxiety (p≤0.05). The improvement in pregnancy anxiety was significantly better in the experimental group than in the control group.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not describe additional limitations beyond the study design and sample size. The findings are based on first-time pregnant women from one tertiary hospital.

Key points

  • Online health education was linked to improved COVID-19 knowledge in first-time pregnant women.
  • Pregnancy anxiety decreased after online health education.
  • The anxiety improvement was greater in the online education group than in the control group.
  • The study used a quasi-experimental pre-test/post-test design with 70 participants.
  • Participants were recruited from one tertiary hospital obstetrics clinic.

Disclosure

Research title:
Online health education improved COVID-19 knowledge and reduced anxiety
Authors:
Junying Xu
Institutions:
Far Eastern University
Publication date:
2026-03-07
OpenAlex record:
View
AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.

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