| Literature DB >> 34106370 |
Nital P Appelbaum1, Sanghamitra M Misra2, Jennifer Welch3, M Harrison Humphries3, Sunthosh Sivam4, Nadia Ismail5.
Abstract
Public health crises require individuals, often volunteers, to help minimize disasters. The COVID-19 pandemic required such activation of individuals, but little is known about medical students' preferences of such engagement. We investigated potential variations in medical students' educational preferences, attitudes, and volunteerism during the COVID-19 pandemic based on socio-demographics to better prepare for future activation scenarios. A web-based, anonymous survey of U.S. medical students at a single institution was conducted in May 2020. Across four training year, 518 (68% response rate) students completed the survey. During the pandemic, 42.3% (n = 215) wanted to discontinue in-person clinical experiences, 32.3% (n = 164) wanted to continue, and 25.4% (n = 129) were neutral. There was no gender effect for engagement in volunteer activities or preference to engage in clinical activities during the pandemic. However, second-year (n = 59, 11.6%) and third-year students (n = 58, 11.4%) wanted to continue in-person clinical experiences at a greater proportion than expected, while a small proportion of fourth-year students (n = 17, 3.3%) wanted to continue, χ2(6) = 43.48, p < .001, φ = 0.29. Majority of respondents (n = 287, 55.5%) volunteered in clinical and non-clinical settings. A lower proportion of fourth-year (n = 12, 2.3%) and first-year students (n = 50, 9.7%) volunteered than expected. Likelihood to volunteer during a pandemic varied by gender, training year, and/or prior experience with disaster event depending on the type of volunteer-site setting. Our findings suggest socio-demographic factors may impact medical student engagement and volunteerism during a public health crisis. Educational leadership should be sensitive to such variations and can facilitate volunteer activities that allow student engagement during future pandemics.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Medical student experience; Medical student responsibilities; Medical student role; Pandemic
Year: 2021 PMID: 34106370 PMCID: PMC8188156 DOI: 10.1007/s10900-021-01009-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Health ISSN: 0094-5145
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | Count (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Training year | ||
| MS1 | 124 (23.9%) | |
| MS2 | 146 (28.1%) | |
| MS3 | 146 (28.2%) | |
| MS4 | 102 (19.7%) | |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 208 (40.2%) | |
| Female | 308 (59.5%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 2 (< 1.0%) | |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||
| African American or black | 8 (1.5%) | |
| Asian | 198 (38.2%) | |
| Caucasian or white | 230 (44.4%) | |
| Latino or hispanic | 56 (10.8%) | |
| Other | 18 (3.5%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 8 (1.5%) | |
| Marital Status | ||
| Single (never married) | 430 (83.0%) | |
| Married | 73 (14.1%) | |
| In a domestic partnership | 11 (2.1%) | |
| Other (Engaged) | 4 (< 1.0%) | |
| Children | ||
| No | 500 (96.5%) | |
| Yes | 18 (3.5%) | |
| Self in high risk categorya | ||
| Yes | 35 (6.8%) | |
| No | 482 (93.1%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 1 (< 1.0%) | |
| Personal close contact(s)in high risk categorya | ||
| Yes | 325 (62.7%) | |
| No | 190 (36.7%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 3 (< 1.0%) | |
| Prior experience with disaster eventb | ||
| Yes | 275 (53.1%) | |
| No | 239 (46.1%) | |
| Prefer not to answer | 4 (< 1.0%) | |
ae.g. Age 60 + , diabetes, hypertension, immune suppression, pregnancy
be.g. Previous pandemic (H1N1), hurricane (Katrina, Imelda, Harvey, etc.), flood, fire, tornado
Changes in student perception on roles during a pandemic
| Perception | Time | Mean (SD) | Paired Samples t-test |
|---|---|---|---|
| During a pandemic like COVID-19, medical student volunteers are helpful in non-clinical settings | Initial mandate | 4.21 (0.82) | t (507) = 0.24, p = 0.03, Cohen’s |
| Two months post | 4.26 (0.87) | ||
| During a pandemic like COVID-19, medical students should be banned from all in-person clinical experiences | Initial mandate | 3.23 (1.27) | t (507) = 1.40, p = 0.16 |
| Two months post | 3.18 (1.26) | ||
| Medical students can be helpful in clinical settings during a pandemic like COVID-19 | Initial mandate | 3.25 (1.14) | t (507) = − 1.03, p = 0.31 |
| Two months post | 3.28 (1.15) |
aBecomes an insignificant finding after Holm-Bonferroni correction
Engagement in volunteer activities and preference to engage in clinical activities during COVID-19 pandemic
| Were you involved in any volunteer opportunities during the COVID-19 pandemic? | When clinical rotations and preceptorships were canceled, did you personally want to continue or discontinue in-person clinical experiences?a | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No, but considered volunteering | No, and did not consider volunteering | Chi Sq test-statistic | Continue | Discontinue | Neutral | Chi Sq test-statistic | |
| Prior experience with disaster event | ||||||||
| Yes | 145 (28.3%) | 97 (18.9%) | 33 (6.4%) | χ2(2) = 1.69, p = 0.43 | 87 (17.3%) | 115 (22.8%) | 68 (13.5%) | χ2(2) = 0.130, p = 0.94 |
| No | 139 (27.1%) | 73 (14.2%) | 26 (5.1%) | 77 (15.3%) | 96 (19.0%) | 61 (12.1%) | ||
| Gender | ||||||||
| Male | 106 (20.6%) | 72 (14.0%) | 29 (5.6%) | χ2(2) = 3.47, p = 0.18 | 74 (14.6%) | 72 (14.2%) | 57 (11.3%) | χ2(2) = 6.48, p = 0.04, φ = 0.11b |
| Female | 180 (35.0%) | 98 (19.0%) | 30 (5.8%) | 90 (17.8%) | 142 (28.1%) | 71 (14.0%) | ||
| Year | ||||||||
| MS1 | 50 (9.7%) | 62 (12.0%) | 12 (2.3%) | χ2(6) = 172.38, p < 0.001, φ = 0.58 | 30 (5.9%) | 72 (14.2%) | 21 (4.1%) | χ2(6) = 43.48, p < 0.001, φ = 0.29 |
| MS2 | 127 (24.6%) | 14 (2.7%) | 4 (0.8%) | 59 (11.6%) | 50 (9.8%) | 33 (6.5%) | ||
| MS3 | 98 (19.0%) | 36 (7.0%) | 12 (2.3%) | 58 (11.4%) | 56 (11.0%) | 32 (6.3%) | ||
| MS4 | 12 (2.3%) | 58 (11.2%) | 32 (6.2%) | 17 (3.3%) | 37 (7.3%) | 43 (8.5%) | ||
| Across all students | 287 (55.5%) | 170 (32.9%) | 60 (11.6%) | 164 (32.3%) | 215 (42.3%) | 129 (25.4%) | ||
aQuestion had 8 (1.5%) students choose “Prefer not to respond”, which was excluded from analysis
bBecomes an insignificant finding after Holm-Bonferroni correction
Barriers to clinical experiences two weeks prior to school mandate to end clinical activities
| Barriers | All Students (n = 518) |
|---|---|
| Could not see certain patients with certain health concerns | 209 (40.3%) |
| Limit on large gatherings (e.g. lectures) | 165 (31.9%) |
| Could not see patients that required PPE | 127 (24.5%) |
| Not allowed to be at clinical site | 57 (11.0%) |
| Patients requested restrictions | 21 (4.1%) |
| Other (please specify) | 43 (8.3%) |
| Did not experience any barriers | 74 (14.3%) |
| Not Applicable/no clinical duties at the time | 141 (27.2%) |
Question asked students to check mark any of the above response options to identify barriers encountered when engaging in clinical activities during the two weeks PRIOR to mandate to restrict students’ clinical experiences. Initial mandate was 03/17/2020 and 2 month post data collection occurred between -5/11/2020 and 5/30/2020
Group differences based on likelihood to volunteer during a pandemic
| During a pandemic, I would volunteer in… | Across all students | Gender | Prior experience with disaster event | Class year | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Group | Mean (SD) | ANOVA | Group | Mean (SD) | ANOVA | Group | Mean (SD) | ANOVA | Tukey post hoc | |
| … a surgical clinical setting | 2.74 (1.46) | Male | 2.91 (1.44) | F(1,512) = 4.42, p = 0.04, ƞ2 = .01a | Yes | 2.55 (1.44) | F(1,510) = 11.386, p = .001, ƞ2 = .02 | MS1 | 2.98 (1.38) | F(3,512) = 7.787, p = 0.001, ƞ2 = .04 | MS1 > MS3 |
| MS2 | 3.06 (1.51) | MS1 > MS4 | |||||||||
| Female | 2.64 (1.47) | No | 2.98 (1.46) | MS3 | 2.52 (1.45) | MS2 > MS3 | |||||
| MS4 | 2.31 (1.37) | MS2 > MS4 | |||||||||
| …an in-patient care setting | 3.19 (1.35) | Male | 3.25 (1.30) | F(1,512) = 0.631, p = 0.43 | Yes | 3.11 (1.37) | F(1,511) = 2.536, p = 0.11 | MS1 | 3.06 (1.31) | F(3,512) = 5.817, p < .001, ƞ2 = .03 | MS1 < MS2 |
| MS2 | 3.48 (1.28) | MS2 > MS4 | |||||||||
| Female | 3.15 (1.37) | No | 3.30 (1.30) | MS3 | 3.28 (1.38) | MS3 > MS4 | |||||
| MS4 | 2.80 (1.35) | ||||||||||
| …an out-patient care setting | 3.45 (1.23) | Male | 3.50 (1.20) | F(1,512) = 0.546, p = 0.46 | Yes | 3.47 (1.25) | F(1,510) = 0.141, p = 0.71 | MS1 | 3.29 (1.20) | F(3,512) = 2.971, p = 0.03, ƞ2 = .02a | |
| MS2 | 3.62 (1.17) | ||||||||||
| Female | 3.42 (1.25) | No | 3.43 (1.21) | MS3 | 3.56 (1.29) | ||||||
| MS4 | 3.23 (1.23) | ||||||||||
| …a non-clinical setting | 4.08 (1.04) | Male | 3.86 (1.14) | F(1,513) = 15.523, p < .001, ƞ2 = .03 | Yes | 4.17 (0.99) | F(1,511) = 4.496, p = 0.03, ƞ2 = .01a | MS1 | 4.04 (0.99) | F(3,513) = 2.123, p = 0.10 | |
| MS2 | 4.10 (1.03) | ||||||||||
| Female | 4.23 (0.93) | No | 3.97 (1.09) | MS3 | 4.22 (1.10) | ||||||
| MS4 | 3.89 (1.01) | ||||||||||
| …a healthcare adjacent setting | 4.03 (1.03) | Male | 3.78 (1.14) | F(1,512) = 22.232, p < .001, ƞ2 = .04 | Yes | 4.08 (1.02) | F(1,510) = 1.121, p = 0.29 | MS1 | 3.94 (0.99) | F(3,512) = 2.249, p = 0.08 | |
| MS2 | 4.13 (0.99) | ||||||||||
| Female | 4.21 (0.90) | No | 3.98 (1.03) | MS3 | 4.13 (1.09) | ||||||
| MS4 | 3.86 (1.01) | ||||||||||
aBecomes an insignificant finding after Holm-Bonferroni correction