BACKGROUND: Depression and heavy stress have been reported as two important problems for medical students in previous studies; and stress and depression levels were also related to gender and grades. The aims of this article were to investigate the emotional problems of Taiwanese interns and clerks, and to clarify their relationship to work circumstances, identity of interns and clerks in the hospitals, gender discrepancy and their levels of stress and depression. METHODS: Three medical centers in Taiwan were selected in this study. All interns in the three medical centers and clerks in Chang Gung Memorial Hospital were invited to complete an anonymous self-report questionnaire. The questionnaire included demographic data, levels of various stresses in hospitals recorded with visual analog scales, and a Chinese version of Zun's Selfadministered Depression Scale. One-way analysis of variance was also adopted to compare the distress scores, and the Scheffe test was chosen for the post hoc comparisons. RESULTS: First, working in different medical centers was not a factor influencing levels of stress and depression of interns. Second, interns had higher stress levels of g"work loading" and "occupational risks", and more depressive symptoms, such as "poor sleep quality", "poor appetite", "libido loss", "body weight loss", and "anhedonia". However, identity did not significantly impact levels of depression. Third, gender discrepancy showed significant influences on some stress sources and depressed symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: When comparing some depressive symptoms and stress sources among medical students, differences of gender and identities were statistically significant. Further longitudinal studies are needed.
BACKGROUND:Depression and heavy stress have been reported as two important problems for medical students in previous studies; and stress and depression levels were also related to gender and grades. The aims of this article were to investigate the emotional problems of Taiwanese interns and clerks, and to clarify their relationship to work circumstances, identity of interns and clerks in the hospitals, gender discrepancy and their levels of stress and depression. METHODS: Three medical centers in Taiwan were selected in this study. All interns in the three medical centers and clerks in Chang Gung Memorial Hospital were invited to complete an anonymous self-report questionnaire. The questionnaire included demographic data, levels of various stresses in hospitals recorded with visual analog scales, and a Chinese version of Zun's Selfadministered Depression Scale. One-way analysis of variance was also adopted to compare the distress scores, and the Scheffe test was chosen for the post hoc comparisons. RESULTS: First, working in different medical centers was not a factor influencing levels of stress and depression of interns. Second, interns had higher stress levels of g"work loading" and "occupational risks", and more depressive symptoms, such as "poor sleep quality", "poor appetite", "libido loss", "body weight loss", and "anhedonia". However, identity did not significantly impact levels of depression. Third, gender discrepancy showed significant influences on some stress sources and depressed symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: When comparing some depressive symptoms and stress sources among medical students, differences of gender and identities were statistically significant. Further longitudinal studies are needed.
Authors: Douglas A Mata; Marco A Ramos; Narinder Bansal; Rida Khan; Constance Guille; Emanuele Di Angelantonio; Srijan Sen Journal: JAMA Date: 2015-12-08 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Muhammed Elhadi; Ala Khaled; Ans Bassam Malek; Ahmed El-Alem El-Azhari; Ahmed Zakaria Gwea; Ahmed Zaid; Salman Mabruk Elturki; Ahmed Aburgegah; Munir Ahmed K Abu Ageila; Abdulmueti Alhadi; Hafed Abdulwahhab Albashkar; Aliyah Mustafa Alshareef; Adel Basher Ben Nama; Nizar Aljarboue Mohammed Sahboun; Hazem Ahmed Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2020-08-27 Impact factor: 2.692