尼日利亚一所私立大学临床医学本科生的神经恐惧症及其相关因素。

Nigerian medical journal : journal of the Nigeria Medical Association Pub Date : 2023-05-11 eCollection Date: 2023-03-01
Chukwuma Okeafor, Ernest Nwazor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:对神经学和神经科学的恐惧被称为神经恐惧症。神经恐惧症是一种全球现象,在撒哈拉以南非洲地区更为严重,因为它影响到神经科医生与人口比例之间已经存在的巨大差距。由于需要找出可以抑制神经恐惧症的可调节因素,本研究旨在确定临床医学本科生神经恐惧症的相关因素:研究采用横断面设计,通过分层抽样选取了 173 名临床医学本科生。采用经过内容验证的自填式问卷调查法,获取学生对神经病学、神经恐惧症以及人口学/学术相关特征的认知数据。在 0.05 的显著水平上进行了二元和多元分析:参与者的平均年龄(±SD)为 25.8(±2.2)岁,男女比例为 1:1.2。半数以上的临床医学本科生认为神经病学教学效果差(77.5%)、难学(83.2%)、临床检查复杂(85.5%)。神经恐惧症的发病率为 76.3%(n=132)。神经恐惧症的重要相关因素是认为神经病学知识贫乏。认为神经病学知识贫乏的学生患神经恐惧症的几率是认为神经病学知识丰富的学生的两倍(AOR=2.14;95%CI:1.04-4.41):结论:在尼日利亚,大约每 10 名临床医学本科生中就有 8 人患有神经恐惧症,而决定性因素是他们认为自己知识贫乏。由于大多数学生认为神经病学课程的教学效果不佳,因此强烈建议采用能够加强神经病学学术能力的教育模式:关键信息:临床医学专业本科生中的神经恐惧症非常普遍,如果不及时采取教育干预措施,神经病学专家与学生比例之间的巨大差距可能会进一步扩大。我们的研究结果突出表明,迫切需要在临床医学专业本科生中建立专门的教育模式,以获得更好的教学辅助工具、同伴讨论和床边教学。
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Neurophobia and its Correlates among Undergraduate Clinical Students in a Nigerian Private University.

Background: The fear of neurology and neurosciences has been referred to as neurophobia. Neurophobia is a global phenomenon, that is worse in sub-Saharan Africa due to its impact on the already established huge gap in the neurologist-to-population ratio. The need to identify modifiable factors that could curb neurophobia stirred the current study, which aimed to determine the correlates of neurophobia among undergraduate clinical students.

Methodology: A cross-sectional design was adopted involving 173 undergraduate clinical students selected via stratified sampling. Content validated, self-administered questionnaire was utilized to obtain data on the perception of neurology, neurophobia, and demographic/academic-related characteristics. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed at the 0.05 significant level.

Results: The mean age (±SD) of the participants was 25.8(±2.2) years with a male-to-female ratio of 1:1.2. More than half of the undergraduate clinical students perceived neurology as being badly taught (77.5%), difficult to learn (83.2%), and with complex clinical examination (85.5%). The prevalence of neurophobia was 76.3% (n=132). The significant correlate of neurophobia was perceived poor knowledge of neurology. Students with poor perceived knowledge of neurology were about two times more likely to have neurophobia than those with perceived good knowledge (AOR=2.14; 95%CI: 1.04-4.41).

Conclusion: Approximately 8 in 10 undergraduate clinical students in Nigeria have neurophobia and the significant determining factor is their perceived poor knowledge. The need to adopt educational models that would strengthen academic prowess in neurology is strongly advocated as most of the students felt that the course was being badly taught.

Key messages: Neurophobia among clinical undergraduate students is rampant, and without timely educational intervention, the existing wide gap in the neurologist-to-population ratio could worsen. Our findings highlight the dire need to institute educational models tailored to attaining better teaching aids, peer discussions, and bedside teaching among clinical undergraduate students.

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