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Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools

BACKGROUND: Medical students have high rates of depression, anxiety, and burnout that have been found to affect their empathy, professional behaviors, and performance as a physician. While studies have examined predictors for burnout and depression in the United States (US), no study, to our knowled...

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Autores principales: Gold, Jessica A, Hu, Xinran, Huang, Gan, Li, Wan-Zhen, Wu, Yi-Fan, Gao, Shan, Liu, Zhe-Ning, Trockel, Mickey, Rohrbaugh, Robert M, Wilkins, Kirsten M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6885454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31799151
http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v9.i4.65
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author Gold, Jessica A
Hu, Xinran
Huang, Gan
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Trockel, Mickey
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Rohrbaugh, Robert M
Wilkins, Kirsten M
author_facet Gold, Jessica A
Hu, Xinran
Huang, Gan
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Trockel, Mickey
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Rohrbaugh, Robert M
Wilkins, Kirsten M
author_sort Gold, Jessica A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medical students have high rates of depression, anxiety, and burnout that have been found to affect their empathy, professional behaviors, and performance as a physician. While studies have examined predictors for burnout and depression in the United States (US), no study, to our knowledge, has compared depression in medical students cross-culturally, or has attempted to examine the effect of factors influencing rates including burnout, exercise, stress, unmet mental health needs, and region. AIM: To examine rates of depression in three international cohorts of medical students, and determine variables that may explain these differences. METHODS: Convenience samples of medical students from three countries (US, China, and a Middle Eastern country whose name remains anonymous per request from the school) were surveyed in this observational study. Using the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2) and a modified Maslach Burnout Inventory, depression and burnout were examined among medical students from the three cohorts (n = 473). Chi-square test and analysis of variance were used to examine differences in demographics, behavioral, and psychological variables across these three schools to identify potentially confounding descriptive characteristics. Analysis of covariance compared depression and the emotional exhaustion component of burnout identified through Principal Component Analysis across countries. Multiple linear regression was used to analyze the impact of demographic, behavioral, and psychological variables on screening positive for depression. RESULTS: Medical students from the Middle Eastern country had the highest rates of positive depression screens (41.1%), defined as a PHQ-2 score of ≥ 3, followed by China (14.1 %), and then the US (3.8%). More students in the Middle Eastern school had unmet mental health needs (50.8%) than at the medical school in China (34.8%) or the school in the US (32.8%) (Pearson chi-square significance < 0.05). Thus, PHQ-2 scores were adjusted for unmet mental health needs; however, the Middle Eastern country continued to have the highest depression. Adjusting for PHQ-2 score, medical students from the US scored the highest on emotional exhaustion (a measure of burnout). Demographic variables did not significantly predict medical student depression; however, lack of exercise, unmet mental health needs, stress, and emotional exhaustion predicted nearly half of depression in these cohorts. In comparison to the US, coming from the Middle Eastern country and China predicted higher levels of depression. CONCLUSION: Depression rates differ in three international cohorts of medical students. Measured factors contributed to some observed differences. Identifying site-specific prevention and intervention strategies in medical student mental health is warranted.
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spelling pubmed-68854542019-12-03 Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools Gold, Jessica A Hu, Xinran Huang, Gan Li, Wan-Zhen Wu, Yi-Fan Gao, Shan Liu, Zhe-Ning Trockel, Mickey Li, Wan-Zhen Wu, Yi-Fan Gao, Shan Liu, Zhe-Ning Rohrbaugh, Robert M Wilkins, Kirsten M World J Psychiatry Observational Study BACKGROUND: Medical students have high rates of depression, anxiety, and burnout that have been found to affect their empathy, professional behaviors, and performance as a physician. While studies have examined predictors for burnout and depression in the United States (US), no study, to our knowledge, has compared depression in medical students cross-culturally, or has attempted to examine the effect of factors influencing rates including burnout, exercise, stress, unmet mental health needs, and region. AIM: To examine rates of depression in three international cohorts of medical students, and determine variables that may explain these differences. METHODS: Convenience samples of medical students from three countries (US, China, and a Middle Eastern country whose name remains anonymous per request from the school) were surveyed in this observational study. Using the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2) and a modified Maslach Burnout Inventory, depression and burnout were examined among medical students from the three cohorts (n = 473). Chi-square test and analysis of variance were used to examine differences in demographics, behavioral, and psychological variables across these three schools to identify potentially confounding descriptive characteristics. Analysis of covariance compared depression and the emotional exhaustion component of burnout identified through Principal Component Analysis across countries. Multiple linear regression was used to analyze the impact of demographic, behavioral, and psychological variables on screening positive for depression. RESULTS: Medical students from the Middle Eastern country had the highest rates of positive depression screens (41.1%), defined as a PHQ-2 score of ≥ 3, followed by China (14.1 %), and then the US (3.8%). More students in the Middle Eastern school had unmet mental health needs (50.8%) than at the medical school in China (34.8%) or the school in the US (32.8%) (Pearson chi-square significance < 0.05). Thus, PHQ-2 scores were adjusted for unmet mental health needs; however, the Middle Eastern country continued to have the highest depression. Adjusting for PHQ-2 score, medical students from the US scored the highest on emotional exhaustion (a measure of burnout). Demographic variables did not significantly predict medical student depression; however, lack of exercise, unmet mental health needs, stress, and emotional exhaustion predicted nearly half of depression in these cohorts. In comparison to the US, coming from the Middle Eastern country and China predicted higher levels of depression. CONCLUSION: Depression rates differ in three international cohorts of medical students. Measured factors contributed to some observed differences. Identifying site-specific prevention and intervention strategies in medical student mental health is warranted. Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2019-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6885454/ /pubmed/31799151 http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v9.i4.65 Text en ©The Author(s) 2019. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Observational Study
Gold, Jessica A
Hu, Xinran
Huang, Gan
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Trockel, Mickey
Li, Wan-Zhen
Wu, Yi-Fan
Gao, Shan
Liu, Zhe-Ning
Rohrbaugh, Robert M
Wilkins, Kirsten M
Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title_full Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title_fullStr Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title_full_unstemmed Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title_short Medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
title_sort medical student depression and its correlates across three international medical schools
topic Observational Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6885454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31799151
http://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v9.i4.65
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