Disordered eating behaviours, self-compassion, and psychological distress in Canadian general surgery residents

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 SURGERY American journal of surgery Pub Date : 2025-03-11 DOI:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2025.116295
Nicole McLellan , Jessica J. Lie , Josie Geller , Heather Stuart
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Abstract

Background

Surgical residents experience higher levels of negative stress and helplessness compared to the general population. Studies have linked stress to negative eating habits. Despite the high stress and burnout among surgical residents, studies on their disordered eating behaviors remain limited. Understanding the factors contributing to these findings will help optimize mental health during residency training.

Methods

This study is a mixed-methods cross-sectional survey of all general surgery residents in Canada. The survey assessed disordered eating, quality of life, and self-compassion using the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26), Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (KPDS), and Self-Compassion short-form scale (SCSF). A qualitative component examined factors influencing eating habits in residency. Logistic regression was performed to identify factors associated with at-risk disordered eating behaviors.

Results

Out of 450 surgical residents, 128 residents completed the survey (28 ​%). Respondents were 23 ​% male and split evenly across all postgraduate levels. There were 68 ​% of respondents who identified as having psychological distress and 34 ​% exhibited high risk behaviors for disordered eating. High levels of psychological distress (OR 3.29; 95 ​% CI [1.39–7.76]) and elevated BMI (OR 3.99; 95 ​% CI [1.63–9.77]) were significantly associated with exhibiting at-risk disordered eating behaviors Positive factors influencing eating were having a partner at home and having non-residency related extracurriculars. Negative factors were overnight call shift frequency, call shift length, and volume of pages.

Conclusion

This is the first nationwide survey examining eating behaviors among general surgery residents. This population was found to have elevated rates of high-risk behavior for disordered eating.
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加拿大普外科住院医师饮食失调、自我同情与心理困扰。
背景:与普通人群相比,外科住院医生经历了更高水平的负压力和无助感。研究表明,压力与不良的饮食习惯有关。尽管外科住院医师的高压力和倦怠,但对其饮食失调行为的研究仍然有限。了解导致这些发现的因素将有助于优化住院医师培训期间的心理健康。方法:本研究采用混合方法对加拿大所有普外科住院医师进行横断面调查。该调查使用饮食态度测试(EAT-26)、凯斯勒心理困扰量表(KPDS)和自我同情简短量表(SCSF)来评估饮食失调、生活质量和自我同情。定性成分检查了影响居民饮食习惯的因素。采用Logistic回归来确定与高危饮食失调行为相关的因素。结果:在450名外科住院医师中,有128名住院医师完成了调查,占28%。受访者中有23%是男性,并且平均分布在所有研究生阶段。68%的受访者认为自己有心理困扰,34%的人表现出饮食失调的高风险行为。高水平的心理困扰(OR 3.29;95% CI[1.39-7.76])和BMI升高(OR 3.99;95% CI[1.63-9.77])与表现出危险的饮食失调行为显著相关。影响饮食的积极因素是家中有伴侣和有与住院医师无关的课外活动。负面因素是隔夜通话转换频率、通话转换长度和页数。结论:这是对普外科住院医师饮食行为的首次全国性调查。研究发现,这一人群饮食失调的高危行为比例较高。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
570
审稿时长
56 days
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Surgery® is a peer-reviewed journal designed for the general surgeon who performs abdominal, cancer, vascular, head and neck, breast, colorectal, and other forms of surgery. AJS is the official journal of 7 major surgical societies* and publishes their official papers as well as independently submitted clinical studies, editorials, reviews, brief reports, correspondence and book reviews.
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