医学培训是唯一的罪魁祸首吗?一代人对我们医学学员心理健康的影响。

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Medical Education Online Pub Date : 2024-12-31 Epub Date: 2024-03-15 DOI:10.1080/10872981.2024.2329404
Shireen Suliman, Margaret Allen, Tawanda Chivese, Angelique E de Rijk, Richard Koopmans, Karen D Könings
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介医学培训对受训者心理健康的负面影响仍然是一个令人担忧的问题。在社会文化环境中,以父母的高度参与和技术的广泛应用为特征的 Z 世代和 Y 世代目前分别主导着本科和研究生医学教育。有必要探讨医学学员的代际特征以及与压力、职业倦怠、抑郁和抗压能力相关的工作因素。这可能会为医学学员的心理健康提供不同的视角和潜在的解决方案:对卡塔尔两所院校的医学见习生(学生和住院医师)进行了一项横断面研究。自我管理的在线调查包括受训者过度使用社交媒体、父母的养育方式、临床教师的教育支持、工作(需求、控制和支持)、工作与生活的平衡以及它们与受训者的压力、倦怠、抑郁和复原力之间的关系。这些关系通过多元线性回归分析进行了检验:在回复的 326 名医学受训者中,有 142 名(44%)受训者(93 名学生和 49 名住院医师)完成了所有项目并被纳入分析。过度使用社交媒体和无法保持工作与生活的平衡与压力、抑郁和学生倦怠程度较高有关。较高水平的工作支持与较低水平的压力、抑郁和住院医师倦怠感以及较高水平的复原力相关。工作控制与较低的职业倦怠水平相关。教养方式与学员的心理健康无关:讨论:当前医学培训中占主导地位的 "Y "和 "Z "两代人在有证据表明过度使用社交媒体和未能保持工作与生活平衡时,会表现出更多与压力相关的抱怨,而工作支持可以抵消这种抱怨,而养育方式则没有影响。提高医学学员心理健康水平的措施可包括开展明智使用社交媒体的教育、鼓励花费更多高质量的社交时间以及加强工作支持和工作控制。
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Is medical training solely to blame? Generational influences on the mental health of our medical trainees.

Introduction: The negative impact of medical training on trainee mental health continues to be a concern. Situated within a sociocultural milieu, Generation Z and Generation Y, defined by their highly involved parents and the widespread use of technology, currently dominate undergraduate and graduate medical education respectively. It is necessary to explore medical trainees' generational characteristics and job-related factors related to stress, burnout, depression, and resilience. This might provide different perspectives and potential solutions to medical trainees' mental health.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among medical trainees (students and residents) from two institutions in Qatar. A self-administered online survey included measures for trainees' social media overuse, their parent's parenting style, the educational support by the clinical teacher, job (demands, control, and support), and work-life balance and their relation with their stress, burnout, depression, and resilience. Relationships were tested with multiple linear regression analyses.

Results: Of the 326 medical trainees who responded, 142 (44%) trainees - 93 students and 49 residents - completed all items and were included in the analysis. Social media overuse and inability to maintain a work-life balance were associated with higher levels of stress, depression, and student burnout. Higher levels of job support were associated with lower levels of stress, depression, and resident burnout, and a higher level of resilience. Job control was associated with lower burnout levels. Parenting style was unrelated to trainees' mental health.

Discussion: The two generations 'Y' and 'Z' dominating current medical training showed more stress-related complaints when there is evidence of social media overuse and failure to maintain a work-life balance, while job support counterbalances this, whereas parenting style showed no effect. Measures to enhance medical trainees' mental health may include education about the wise use of social media, encouraging spending more quality social time, and enhancing job support and job control.

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来源期刊
Medical Education Online
Medical Education Online EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
97
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Education Online is an open access journal of health care education, publishing peer-reviewed research, perspectives, reviews, and early documentation of new ideas and trends. Medical Education Online aims to disseminate information on the education and training of physicians and other health care professionals. Manuscripts may address any aspect of health care education and training, including, but not limited to: -Basic science education -Clinical science education -Residency education -Learning theory -Problem-based learning (PBL) -Curriculum development -Research design and statistics -Measurement and evaluation -Faculty development -Informatics/web
期刊最新文献
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