Adverse Childhood Experiences, Psychological Distress, and Resilience in Health Professions Students.

IF 5.3 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Andrés F Sciolla, Cara M Sandholdt, Karl E Jandrey, Margaret Rea, Elizabeth I Rice, Machelle D Wilson, Michael S Wilkes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the relationship between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), social disadvantage, psychological distress, and resilience in graduate health professions students.

Method: This study includes cross-sectional analyses from a longitudinal survey of medical, veterinary, and advanced practice provider students at matriculation to the University of California Davis in July 2019. The survey contained an expanded Adverse Childhood Experiences Questionnaire (ACEs-14), a measure of psychological distress (the Medical Student Well-Being Index [MSWBI]), and the Brief Resilience Scale. Responses were linked to demographics, including markers of social disadvantage (female gender, underrepresented in medicine [URM] status, and first-generation college graduate [first-gen] status). The relationships between ACEs, social disadvantage, psychological distress, and resilience were tested using linear or logistic regression.

Results: Complete survey responses were provided from 240 of 357 students (67% completion rate). About two-thirds of students (67%, 161/240) reported ≥1 ACE, while a quarter (25%, 60/240) reported ≥4 ACEs. URM and first-gen students had higher odds of reporting ≥4 ACEs (odds ratio [OR] = 1.56; P = .049 and OR = 2.63; P < .001, respectively) than their nondisadvantaged peers based on binary logistic regression analysis. Higher ACEs-14 scores were associated with higher psychological distress scores (P < .001). The majority of students reported normal or high resilience (normal: 76%, 183/240; high: 10%, 25/240) regardless of ACEs-14 scores. There was not a statistically significant relationship between ACEs-14 scores and resilience scores (P = 0.936).

Conclusions: Health professions students from some socially disadvantaged backgrounds at this institution reported statistically significantly higher ACEs-14 scores than their nondisadvantaged peers. Childhood adversity was associated with increased psychological distress but not with low resilience. Implications for equity- and trauma-informed health professions education and interventions are discussed.

不良童年经历、心理困扰和健康专业学生的恢复力。
目的:探讨卫生专业研究生童年不良经历、社会劣势、心理困扰与心理弹性之间的关系。方法:本研究包括对2019年7月加州大学戴维斯分校入学的医学、兽医和高级实践提供者学生进行的纵向调查的横断面分析。该调查包括一个扩展的童年不良经历问卷(ACEs-14),一个心理困扰的测量(医学生幸福指数[MSWBI]),和简短的弹性量表。调查结果与人口统计数据有关,包括社会劣势的标志(女性、医学领域代表性不足[URM]地位、第一代大学毕业生[第一代]地位)。采用线性回归或逻辑回归对不良经历、社会劣势、心理困扰和心理弹性之间的关系进行检验。结果:357名学生中有240名学生提供了完整的调查反馈(完成率67%)。大约三分之二的学生(67%,161/240)报告≥1个ACE,而四分之一(25%,60/240)报告≥4个ACE。URM和第一代学生报告≥4次ace的几率更高(优势比[OR] = 1.56;P = 0.049, OR = 2.63;P < 0.001),与非弱势群体相比差异显著。ace -14评分越高,心理困扰评分越高(P < 0.001)。大多数学生报告正常或高弹性(正常:76%,183/240;高:10%,25/240),无论ace -14分数如何。ace -14评分与心理弹性评分无统计学意义(P = 0.936)。结论:该机构一些社会弱势背景的卫生专业学生报告的ace -14分数在统计学上显著高于非弱势背景的同龄人。童年的逆境与心理困扰的增加有关,但与低恢复力无关。对公平和创伤知情卫生专业教育和干预的影响进行了讨论。
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来源期刊
Academic Medicine
Academic Medicine 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
9.50%
发文量
982
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Academic Medicine, the official peer-reviewed journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, acts as an international forum for exchanging ideas, information, and strategies to address the significant challenges in academic medicine. The journal covers areas such as research, education, clinical care, community collaboration, and leadership, with a commitment to serving the public interest.
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