Assessing Psychological Resilience and Distress Among Graduate Health Profession Students During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Shane Clark, Emily Loe, Lisa J Merlo, Irene M Estores
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Abstract

Background: Resilience, a person's ability to adapt to adverse events, is associated with positive outcomes, especially in the field of healthcare. Research into the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic may help to understand and combat the long-term mental health burden for trainees in health care.

Objective: This cross-sectional study aimed to assess the impact of the pandemic on health profession students' educational experiences, determine the association between their self-reported resilience and psychological distress and assess group differences between students from different graduate health profession programs in an academic medical center.

Methods: Graduate health profession students completed a 44-question online survey and the 10-item Connor Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC-10) during the COVID-19 pandemic period between January-March 2021. We used descriptive statistics, independent samples t test, Related-samples Wilcoxon signed rank test, Pearson correlations test and Analysis of variance (ANOVA) to analyze the data.

Results: Majority of respondents reported that COVID-19 had a negative impact on their education and caused a reduction in educational opportunities (76.6% and 73% respectively). Majority also reported feeling burned out, lonely/isolated, or frustrated by COVID-19 restrictions (70.0%, 67.4%, and 61.8% respectively). Students reported increased use of both avoidant and adaptive coping strategies during the pandemic. Higher resilience scores were associated with higher self-reported stress, fewer burnout symptoms, and better overall well-being.

Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic significantly affected students in graduate health profession programs. Instructional quality, educational opportunities, institutional trust, peer socialization, and personal health and wellbeing were perceived to be negatively impacted. Students may require additional support and resources from their training programs to mitigate these concerns. Future studies should evaluate the long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic among pandemic-era graduate health profession students.

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COVID-19大流行期间研究生卫生专业学生的心理弹性和痛苦评估
背景:弹性,一个人适应不良事件的能力,与积极的结果相关,特别是在医疗保健领域。对COVID-19大流行影响的研究可能有助于了解和应对卫生保健受训人员的长期精神健康负担。目的:本横断面研究旨在评估大流行对卫生专业学生教育经历的影响,确定其自我报告的弹性与心理困扰之间的关系,并评估不同学术医学中心卫生专业研究生专业学生的群体差异。方法:在2021年1月至3月COVID-19大流行期间,卫生专业研究生完成了44个问题的在线调查和10个项目的Connor Davidson弹性量表(CD-RISC-10)。我们采用描述性统计、独立样本t检验、相关样本Wilcoxon sign rank检验、Pearson相关性检验和方差分析(ANOVA)对数据进行分析。结果:大多数受访者表示新冠肺炎对他们的教育产生了负面影响,导致受教育机会减少(分别为76.6%和73%)。大多数人还报告说,他们对COVID-19的限制感到精疲力竭、孤独/孤立或沮丧(分别为70.0%、67.4%和61.8%)。学生报告说,在大流行期间,回避和适应性应对策略的使用有所增加。较高的恢复力得分与较高的自我报告压力、较少的倦怠症状和更好的整体幸福感相关。结论:2019冠状病毒病大流行对卫生专业研究生的影响显著。教学质量、教育机会、机构信任、同伴社会化以及个人健康和福祉被认为受到负面影响。学生可能需要从他们的培训项目中获得额外的支持和资源来减轻这些担忧。未来的研究应评估COVID-19大流行对大流行时代卫生专业研究生的长期影响。
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