Sleep quality and associated factors in Latin American medical students: a cross-sectional and multicenter study.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH BMC Public Health Pub Date : 2025-02-24 DOI:10.1186/s12889-025-21569-y
Mario J Valladares-Garrido, Noelia Morocho-Alburqueque, J Pierre Zila-Velasque, Ludwing A Zeta Solis, Hortencia M Saldaña-Cumpa, David Astudillo Rueda, C Ichiro Peralta Chiguala, Fatima Jiménez-Mozo, Christopher G Valdiviezo-Morales, E Sebastian Benavides Alburqueque, Estrella Christabel Porras Núñez, Helena Dominguez-Troncos, Víctor J Vera-Ponce, Danai Valladares-Garrido, Virgilio E Failoc-Rojas, César J Pereira-Victorio, Carlos Culquichicón
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Abstract

Background: Existing literature has not stablished the factors associated with sleep quality, which requires further research in the context of the mental health of future medical professionals. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and factors related to sleep quality in Latin American medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: Cross-sectional multicenter analytic study of secondary data analysis in Latin American medical students. The sampling was non-probabilistic snowball sampling. Sleep quality (Pittsburgh questionnaire) and its association with psychosocial-academic variables, depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 questionnaire), anxious symptoms (GAD-7 questionnaire), resilience (abbreviated CD-RISC questionnaire), eating disorder (EAT-26 questionnaire), physical activity (IPAQ questionnaire-short version), tobacco and alcohol consumption (ASSIST questionnaire) and burnout syndrome (Maslash questionnaire) were assessed. Prevalence ratios and 95% confidence intervals were estimated.

Results: Of 2019 medical students, the prevalence of poor sleep quality was 62.2% (95%CI: 60.00%-64.28%). In the multiple regression model, factors that were positively associated with poorer sleep quality were female sex (PR: 1.13), moderate risk of smoking (PR: 1.08), the presence of moderate to severe depressive symptoms (PR: 2.19 and PR: 2.14, respectively), as well as moderate and severe anxiety symptoms (PR: 1.21 and PR: 1.22, respectively). On the other hand, factors that were negatively associated with poorer sleep quality were having received training on COVID-19 (PR: 0.95), having a history of COVID-19 (PR: 0.80), and having a high level of resilience (PR: 0.86).

Conclusion: It was found that 62.2% of students had poor sleep quality. Factors such as female sex, moderate risk of smoking, and depressive and anxious symptoms were associated with poor sleep quality, while COVID-19 training, history of the disease, and a high level of resilience were linked to better quality. These findings are key for public health, as poor sleep quality affects physical and mental health and academic performance, underscoring the importance of intervening on these factors to improve student well-being.

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拉丁美洲医学生的睡眠质量及相关因素:一项横断面和多中心研究
背景:现有文献尚未确定与睡眠质量相关的因素,这需要在未来医学专业人员心理健康的背景下进一步研究。本研究旨在确定COVID-19大流行期间拉丁美洲医学生的患病率及其与睡眠质量相关的因素。方法:对拉丁美洲医学生的二手资料进行横断面多中心分析研究。抽样为非概率雪球抽样。评估睡眠质量(匹兹堡问卷)及其与心理-社会-学术变量、抑郁症状(PHQ-9问卷)、焦虑症状(GAD-7问卷)、恢复力(简略CD-RISC问卷)、饮食失调(EAT-26问卷)、体力活动(IPAQ问卷-简略版)、烟酒消费(ASSIST问卷)和倦怠综合征(Maslash问卷)的关系。估计患病率和95%置信区间。结果:2019年医学生中睡眠质量差的患病率为62.2% (95%CI: 60.00% ~ 64.28%)。在多元回归模型中,与较差睡眠质量呈正相关的因素是女性(PR: 1.13)、中度吸烟风险(PR: 1.08)、存在中重度抑郁症状(PR: 2.19和PR: 2.14)以及中重度焦虑症状(PR: 1.21和PR: 1.22)。另一方面,与较差睡眠质量负相关的因素是接受过COVID-19培训(PR: 0.95)、有COVID-19病史(PR: 0.80)和具有高水平的恢复力(PR: 0.86)。结论:62.2%的学生睡眠质量较差。女性、吸烟的中等风险、抑郁和焦虑症状等因素与睡眠质量差有关,而COVID-19培训、疾病史和高水平的恢复力与更好的睡眠质量有关。这些发现对公共卫生至关重要,因为睡眠质量差会影响身心健康和学习成绩,强调了干预这些因素以改善学生健康的重要性。
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来源期刊
BMC Public Health
BMC Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.40%
发文量
2108
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Public Health is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on the epidemiology of disease and the understanding of all aspects of public health. The journal has a special focus on the social determinants of health, the environmental, behavioral, and occupational correlates of health and disease, and the impact of health policies, practices and interventions on the community.
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