TY - JOUR T1 - Economic Evaluation of Stress Management Intervention for Undergraduate Economics Students AU - Munachiso Eze, Daniel AU - N. Ogbueghu, Sylvester AU - Regina Ogbuagu, Anuli AU - Nnaemeka Amedu, Amos AU - Igwe Robert, Augustine AU - Euphemia Opara, Ifeoma AU - Ejiofor Ugwuanyi, Benedict AU - Ogbonnaya Chukwu, Chukwuma AU - Bassey Abonor, Lazarus JO - Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences VL - 15 IS - 10 SP - 2186 EP - 2190 PY - 2020 DA - 2001/08/19 SN - 1816-949x DO - jeasci.2020.2186.2190 UR - https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?doi=jeasci.2020.2186.2190 KW - Economic evaluation KW -stress management intervention KW -undergraduate economics students AB - Academic-related stress is widespread among undergraduate students and associated with high costs for Nigerian society. Stress Management interventions (SMIs) employing emotional coping skills appear promising for students with stress and stress-related issues. However, evidence for their cost-effectiveness is scarce in developing economies. The study aimed at appraising the economic utility of a stress management intervention designed for undergraduate economics students. The study adopted a randomized control trial design to ascertain the economic value of a stress management intervention for undergraduate economics students. A sample of 300 undergraduate economics students with elevated symptoms of perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale = 22) was assigned to either the SMI or a Waitlist Control Condition (WLC). Results suggest that presenting an SMI which employs emotional coping skills to assist stressed undergraduate economics students has the probability of being cost-effective compared with WLC. ER -