Surviving Medical School During a Pandemic: Experiences of New York Medical Students During the Height of SARS-CoV-2

L. M. Knight, Divya Seth, David Alex Zuckerman, Eli J. Rogers, Zain Talukdar, Davy Ran, Robert G. Holloway, Caroline Gomez, Mariluz P. Henshaw, Michael R. Privitera, Frank Dowling
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Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically altered the landscape of medical education. While patients overwhelmed hospital systems, lockdowns and social distancing recommendations took priority, and medical education was pushed online. Early in 2020, New York State (NYS) was hit especially hard by COVID-19. Objective: This study sought to understand the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on medical students well-being and education. Methods: NYS medical students responded to a six-question survey during April and May 2020. Questions assessed self-reported changes in stress levels, academic performance, and board preparation efforts. Open-ended data was analyzed using a modified grounded theory approach. Results: 488 responses across 11 medical schools were included (response rate of 5.8%). Major themes included: standardized test-related stressors (23%), study-related changes (19%), education and training concerns (17%), financial stressors (12%), and additional family obligations (12%). Second year students reported more stress/anxiety than students in other years (95.9%, p-value< 0.00001). Reported stress/anxiety, effects on exam preparation, and anticipated academic effect varied by geographics. Conclusions: While all NYS medical students reported being greatly affected, those closest to the NY City pandemic epi-center and closest to taking the Step 1 exam were the most distressed. Lack of flexibility of the medical education system during this public health emergency contributed to worsened student well-being. It is time to make plans for supporting the long-term mental health needs of these physicians-in-training and to examine ways the academic medical community can better adapt to the needs of students affected by a large public health emergency in the future.
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大流行病期间医学院的生存之道:纽约医科学生在 SARS-CoV-2 高峰期的经历
背景:COVID-19 大流行极大地改变了医学教育的格局。当病人使医院系统不堪重负时,封锁和社会疏远建议成为优先事项,医学教育被推向网络。2020 年初,纽约州(NYS)受 COVID-19 的影响尤为严重:本研究旨在了解 COVID-19 大流行对医学生福祉和教育的影响。研究方法:纽约州医科学生在 2020 年 4 月和 5 月期间回答了一项包含六个问题的调查。这些问题评估了压力水平、学习成绩和董事会准备工作方面的自我报告变化。采用改良的基础理论方法对开放式数据进行了分析:共收到 11 所医学院的 488 份回复(回复率为 5.8%)。主要主题包括:与标准化考试相关的压力(23%)、与学习相关的变化(19%)、对教育和培训的担忧(17%)、经济压力(12%)以及额外的家庭义务(12%)。与其他年级的学生相比,二年级学生报告的压力/焦虑更多 (95.9%, p值< 0.00001)。报告的压力/焦虑、对备考的影响以及预期的学术效果因地域而异:尽管所有纽约州医科学生都表示受到了很大影响,但那些离纽约市大流行病中心最近、最接近参加第 1 步考试的医科学生受到的影响最大。在这次公共卫生突发事件中,医学教育系统缺乏灵活性,导致学生的健康状况恶化。现在是时候制定计划,支持这些受训医生的长期心理健康需求,并研究学术医学界在未来如何更好地适应受大型公共卫生突发事件影响的学生的需求了。
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