Financial Literacy and Wellbeing Among Medical Students, Residents, and Attending Physicians in Lebanon: Results From a Nationwide Multi-Centered Survey.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
MohammadAli Jardaly, Jumana Antoun, Rania Sakr, Hassan Doumiati, Issam Shaarani
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Abstract

Financial wellbeing and financial literacy are crucial aspects of personal and professional lives, particularly in graduate medical education. Low financial literacy among healthcare professionals, including physicians, has been identified as a concern, impacting job satisfaction, productivity, and burnout. Few studies have used validated methods, assessed financial wellbeing, or compared financial outcomes across the continuum of medical education and practice. This study aims to measure the financial wellbeing of healthcare professionals and trainees and its predictors using validated instruments on a nationwide scale in Lebanon. This is a multi-institutional cross-sectional study using an online survey using validated instruments, including the CFPB Financial Well-Being Scale and Lusardi and Mitchell's "Big Five" financial literacy questions. The data was collected in April and May 2020. The population includes medical students, residents, and practicing physicians in all six private medical schools and their affiliated medical centers in Lebanon. A total of 330 responded, with a response rate of 20.7%. The financial wellbeing score (out of 10 was 57.2 ± 9.7 before the financial crisis and dropped to 45.2 ± 10.1 during the country's financial crisis. With a passing grade of 60%, 75.3% (195/259) failed the financial knowledge questions. Attending physicians outperformed students and residents/fellows regarding knowledge scores. Financial wellbeing was positively associated with age, family socioeconomic status, and household income. It was negatively associated with the crowding index and agreement with the attitude of living for today and letting tomorrow take care of itself. Medical students, residents, and physicians in Lebanon had low financial literacy. Attending physicians have high financial wellbeing despite low financial literacy and lack of formal education. The COVID-19 pandemic and economic crisis adversely affected the financial wellbeing of all three groups.

黎巴嫩医学生、住院医师和主治医师的财务知识和福利:全国多中心调查的结果。
财务健康和财务知识是个人和职业生活的重要方面,尤其是在医学研究生教育中。包括医生在内的医疗保健专业人员的财务素养低下已被确定为一个令人担忧的问题,它会影响工作满意度、工作效率和职业倦怠。很少有研究使用有效的方法来评估财务状况,或比较医学教育和实践过程中的财务结果。本研究旨在黎巴嫩全国范围内使用经过验证的工具测量医护人员和受训人员的财务健康状况及其预测因素。这是一项多机构横断面研究,采用在线调查的方式,使用的有效工具包括 CFPB 财务状况量表以及 Lusardi 和 Mitchell 的 "五大 "财务知识问题。数据收集时间为 2020 年 4 月和 5 月。调查对象包括黎巴嫩所有六所私立医学院及其附属医疗中心的医学生、住院医师和执业医师。共有 330 人回复,回复率为 20.7%。在金融危机之前,财务状况得分(满分 10 分)为 57.2 ± 9.7,而在国家金融危机期间则降至 45.2 ± 10.1。及格分数为 60%,75.3%(195/259)的人在金融知识问题上不及格。主治医师的知识得分高于学生和住院医师/研究员。财务状况与年龄、家庭社会经济地位和家庭收入呈正相关。它与拥挤指数和对 "过好今天,让明天自己来 "的态度的认同度呈负相关。黎巴嫩的医学生、住院医师和医生的财务知识水平较低。尽管主治医师的财务知识水平较低且缺乏正规教育,但他们的财务幸福感却很高。COVID-19 大流行和经济危机对所有三个群体的财务状况都产生了不利影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
192
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: INQUIRY is a peer-reviewed open access journal whose msision is to to improve health by sharing research spanning health care, including public health, health services, and health policy.
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