Nayesha Mahwish, R. Dube, Subhranshu Sekhar Kar, Malavika Santhosh, Alweena Kidwai, Jewel Mary Kenneth
{"title":"Prevalence and Impact of Dysmenorrhea on the Academic Performance of\nStudents at Medical and Health Sciences University","authors":"Nayesha Mahwish, R. Dube, Subhranshu Sekhar Kar, Malavika Santhosh, Alweena Kidwai, Jewel Mary Kenneth","doi":"10.2174/0102506882288695240221071629","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n\nDysmenorrhea is painful menstruation and is the most common menstrual symptom affecting adolescents. Evidence suggests that worldwide\nprevalence can be high and can significantly affect academic performance through its impact on activity, absenteeism, and other aspects of\nlearning.\n\n\n\nThis is a cross-sectional survey using a pre-validated questionnaire incorporating demography, menstrual history, severity, and effects on academic\nperformance. Female students selected by non-probability sampling of Ras al Khaimah Medical and Health Sciences University were included\n(calculated sample size=249).\n\n\n\nA total of 252 students participated (mean age 20.14 years). The prevalence of dysmenorrhea was 80.5%. Pain was severe for 25.1% (≥7/10\nscore),14.7% reported severely restricted daily activity, 66% received regular treatment, and 24(11.8%) required hospitalization during the last year\ndue to pain. More than 50% of students missed academic sessions, 68% had trouble concentrating, 70. 4% were unable to study. 59% had an\ninability to complete assignments, 58% had trouble concentrating during examinations, and 8.8% missed assessments due to dysmenorrhea. The\nmajority missed 1-2 days each month. Dysmenorrhea was a significant predictor of academic domains (AD) like reduced concentration, inability to\ncomplete assignments, missing lectures, and assessments [ adjusted OR-2.25, 5.57, 4.32, 3.96] with p less than .05 in each. Moderate to severe pain\nwas an independent predictor of all AD compared to mild pain (score less than 3) (p=.026). Moderate to severe dysmenorrhea had a significant\nnegative impact on academic performance(p=.02).\n\n\n\nDysmenorrhea is a prevalent health problem among university students and has a significant negative impact on education.\n","PeriodicalId":508641,"journal":{"name":"New Emirates Medical Journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"New Emirates Medical Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2174/0102506882288695240221071629","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Dysmenorrhea is painful menstruation and is the most common menstrual symptom affecting adolescents. Evidence suggests that worldwide
prevalence can be high and can significantly affect academic performance through its impact on activity, absenteeism, and other aspects of
learning.
This is a cross-sectional survey using a pre-validated questionnaire incorporating demography, menstrual history, severity, and effects on academic
performance. Female students selected by non-probability sampling of Ras al Khaimah Medical and Health Sciences University were included
(calculated sample size=249).
A total of 252 students participated (mean age 20.14 years). The prevalence of dysmenorrhea was 80.5%. Pain was severe for 25.1% (≥7/10
score),14.7% reported severely restricted daily activity, 66% received regular treatment, and 24(11.8%) required hospitalization during the last year
due to pain. More than 50% of students missed academic sessions, 68% had trouble concentrating, 70. 4% were unable to study. 59% had an
inability to complete assignments, 58% had trouble concentrating during examinations, and 8.8% missed assessments due to dysmenorrhea. The
majority missed 1-2 days each month. Dysmenorrhea was a significant predictor of academic domains (AD) like reduced concentration, inability to
complete assignments, missing lectures, and assessments [ adjusted OR-2.25, 5.57, 4.32, 3.96] with p less than .05 in each. Moderate to severe pain
was an independent predictor of all AD compared to mild pain (score less than 3) (p=.026). Moderate to severe dysmenorrhea had a significant
negative impact on academic performance(p=.02).
Dysmenorrhea is a prevalent health problem among university students and has a significant negative impact on education.
痛经是指痛经,是影响青少年最常见的月经症状。有证据表明,痛经在全世界的发病率都很高,而且会通过影响活动、旷课和学习的其他方面而严重影响学习成绩。这是一项横断面调查,使用的是一份预先验证过的问卷,内容包括人口统计学、月经史、严重程度以及对学习成绩的影响。调查对象包括哈伊马角医科大学(Ras al Khaimah Medical and Health Sciences University)通过非概率抽样选出的女学生(计算样本量=249),共有 252 名学生参加(平均年龄 20.14 岁)。痛经发生率为 80.5%。25.1%的学生疼痛严重(≥7/10分),14.7%的学生表示日常活动严重受限,66%的学生接受了正规治疗,24人(11.8%)在过去一年中因疼痛需要住院治疗。50%以上的学生缺课,68%的学生无法集中注意力,70.4%的学生无法学习。59%的学生无法完成作业,58%的学生在考试时无法集中注意力,8.8%的学生因痛经而错过了评估。大多数人每个月都会缺课 1-2 天。痛经可显著预测学习领域(AD),如注意力不集中、无法完成作业、缺席讲座和评估[调整后 OR-2.25, 5.57, 4.32, 3.96],且每项预测的 P 均小于 0.05。与轻度疼痛(评分小于 3 分)相比,中度至重度疼痛是所有 AD 的独立预测因子(P=.026)。中度至重度痛经对学习成绩有显著的负面影响(p=.02)。