Cargando…

A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education

Bullying is defined as unpleasant behavior that causes someone to feel disturbed or embarrassed, affecting their self-esteem. Based on this premise, we set out to investigate bullying among Syrian graduate medical education residents and fellows, estimate its prevalence among specific subgroups, and...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Swed, Sarya, Shoib, Sheikh, Almoshantaf, Mohammad Bader, Bohsas, Haidara, Hassan, Ahmad Salah Eldin Mohamed, Motawea, Karam R., Hassan, Noheir Ashraf Ibrahem Fathy, Ahmad, Eman Mohammed Sharif, Sheet, Lana, Khairy, Lina Taha, Bakkour, Agyad, Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein, Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein, Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla, Ahmad, Shoaib, Hasan, Mohammad Mehedi, Elkalagi, Nashaat Kamal Hamdy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9301191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35875042
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.916385
_version_ 1784751372779913216
author Swed, Sarya
Shoib, Sheikh
Almoshantaf, Mohammad Bader
Bohsas, Haidara
Hassan, Ahmad Salah Eldin Mohamed
Motawea, Karam R.
Hassan, Noheir Ashraf Ibrahem Fathy
Ahmad, Eman Mohammed Sharif
Sheet, Lana
Khairy, Lina Taha
Bakkour, Agyad
Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein
Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein
Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla
Ahmad, Shoaib
Hasan, Mohammad Mehedi
Elkalagi, Nashaat Kamal Hamdy
author_facet Swed, Sarya
Shoib, Sheikh
Almoshantaf, Mohammad Bader
Bohsas, Haidara
Hassan, Ahmad Salah Eldin Mohamed
Motawea, Karam R.
Hassan, Noheir Ashraf Ibrahem Fathy
Ahmad, Eman Mohammed Sharif
Sheet, Lana
Khairy, Lina Taha
Bakkour, Agyad
Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein
Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein
Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla
Ahmad, Shoaib
Hasan, Mohammad Mehedi
Elkalagi, Nashaat Kamal Hamdy
author_sort Swed, Sarya
collection PubMed
description Bullying is defined as unpleasant behavior that causes someone to feel disturbed or embarrassed, affecting their self-esteem. Based on this premise, we set out to investigate bullying among Syrian graduate medical education residents and fellows, estimate its prevalence among specific subgroups, and give recommendations to help validate the findings and enhance the graduate medical education training experience. A sample of 278 residents and fellows in Syrian graduate medical school were recruited for the study in a national cross-sectional survey, with 276 participants completing a Bullying survey in 2021 and two people refusing to participate. Participants in the survey were asked to provide basic demographic and programming information and three general Bullying and 20 specific bullying behavior items. Differences across groups were compared for demographic and programmatic stratifications. About 51% of participants had experienced one or more bullying behaviors, 69% said they had been bullied, and 87% said they had witnessed Bullying. Residents and supervisor-attendings were the most common sources of perceived Bullying (~67 and 62%, respectively), followed by patients (58%), nurses (46%), and pharmacists (46%) (33%). More specific bullying behaviors have been recorded by female Arabic Syrians who are shorter than 5'8, have a body mass index (BMI) of 25, and are 30 years old or younger who were -compared to males- more likely to report attempts to minimize and devalue work (55 vs. 34%, P ≤ 0.01) and criticism and work monitoring (56 vs. 33%, P ≤ 0.01). In addition, general medical graduates and PGY-2-PGY-6 respondents reported more specific bullying behaviors than private medical graduates and post-graduate participants in the first year (PGY 1), respectively. For example, a significant difference is noticed when reporting unreasonable pressure to perform work (83 vs. 6%, P ≤ 0.01). Except for physical violence, which does not differ statistically between groups, most bullying behaviors were reported by participants with statistically significant differences between study groups—many residents and fellows in Syria's graduate medical school system report being bullied. Anti-bullying rules and a multidisciplinary strategy including all players in the medical system are essential to eradicating these pervasive practices in healthcare.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9301191
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-93011912022-07-22 A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education Swed, Sarya Shoib, Sheikh Almoshantaf, Mohammad Bader Bohsas, Haidara Hassan, Ahmad Salah Eldin Mohamed Motawea, Karam R. Hassan, Noheir Ashraf Ibrahem Fathy Ahmad, Eman Mohammed Sharif Sheet, Lana Khairy, Lina Taha Bakkour, Agyad Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla Ahmad, Shoaib Hasan, Mohammad Mehedi Elkalagi, Nashaat Kamal Hamdy Front Public Health Public Health Bullying is defined as unpleasant behavior that causes someone to feel disturbed or embarrassed, affecting their self-esteem. Based on this premise, we set out to investigate bullying among Syrian graduate medical education residents and fellows, estimate its prevalence among specific subgroups, and give recommendations to help validate the findings and enhance the graduate medical education training experience. A sample of 278 residents and fellows in Syrian graduate medical school were recruited for the study in a national cross-sectional survey, with 276 participants completing a Bullying survey in 2021 and two people refusing to participate. Participants in the survey were asked to provide basic demographic and programming information and three general Bullying and 20 specific bullying behavior items. Differences across groups were compared for demographic and programmatic stratifications. About 51% of participants had experienced one or more bullying behaviors, 69% said they had been bullied, and 87% said they had witnessed Bullying. Residents and supervisor-attendings were the most common sources of perceived Bullying (~67 and 62%, respectively), followed by patients (58%), nurses (46%), and pharmacists (46%) (33%). More specific bullying behaviors have been recorded by female Arabic Syrians who are shorter than 5'8, have a body mass index (BMI) of 25, and are 30 years old or younger who were -compared to males- more likely to report attempts to minimize and devalue work (55 vs. 34%, P ≤ 0.01) and criticism and work monitoring (56 vs. 33%, P ≤ 0.01). In addition, general medical graduates and PGY-2-PGY-6 respondents reported more specific bullying behaviors than private medical graduates and post-graduate participants in the first year (PGY 1), respectively. For example, a significant difference is noticed when reporting unreasonable pressure to perform work (83 vs. 6%, P ≤ 0.01). Except for physical violence, which does not differ statistically between groups, most bullying behaviors were reported by participants with statistically significant differences between study groups—many residents and fellows in Syria's graduate medical school system report being bullied. Anti-bullying rules and a multidisciplinary strategy including all players in the medical system are essential to eradicating these pervasive practices in healthcare. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9301191/ /pubmed/35875042 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.916385 Text en Copyright © 2022 Swed, Shoib, Almoshantaf, Bohsas, Hassan, Motawea, Hassan, Ahmad, Sheet, Khairy, Bakkour, Muwaili, Muwaili, Abdelmajid, Ahmad, Hasan and Elkalagi. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Swed, Sarya
Shoib, Sheikh
Almoshantaf, Mohammad Bader
Bohsas, Haidara
Hassan, Ahmad Salah Eldin Mohamed
Motawea, Karam R.
Hassan, Noheir Ashraf Ibrahem Fathy
Ahmad, Eman Mohammed Sharif
Sheet, Lana
Khairy, Lina Taha
Bakkour, Agyad
Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein
Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein
Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla
Ahmad, Shoaib
Hasan, Mohammad Mehedi
Elkalagi, Nashaat Kamal Hamdy
A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title_full A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title_fullStr A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title_full_unstemmed A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title_short A National Cross-Sectional Survey of Bullying in Syrian Graduate Medical Education
title_sort national cross-sectional survey of bullying in syrian graduate medical education
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9301191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35875042
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.916385
work_keys_str_mv AT swedsarya anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT shoibsheikh anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT almoshantafmohammadbader anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT bohsashaidara anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hassanahmadsalaheldinmohamed anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT motaweakaramr anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hassannoheirashrafibrahemfathy anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT ahmademanmohammedsharif anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT sheetlana anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT khairylinataha anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT bakkouragyad anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT muwailialihadihussein anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT muwailidhuhahadihussein anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT abdelmajidfatimaabubakerabdalla anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT ahmadshoaib anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hasanmohammadmehedi anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT elkalaginashaatkamalhamdy anationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT swedsarya nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT shoibsheikh nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT almoshantafmohammadbader nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT bohsashaidara nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hassanahmadsalaheldinmohamed nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT motaweakaramr nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hassannoheirashrafibrahemfathy nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT ahmademanmohammedsharif nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT sheetlana nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT khairylinataha nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT bakkouragyad nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT muwailialihadihussein nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT muwailidhuhahadihussein nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT abdelmajidfatimaabubakerabdalla nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT ahmadshoaib nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT hasanmohammadmehedi nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation
AT elkalaginashaatkamalhamdy nationalcrosssectionalsurveyofbullyinginsyriangraduatemedicaleducation