医学生对社会支持的感知。

IF 1.1
Sharon Casapulla, Jason Rodriguez, Samantha Nandyal, Bhakti Chavan
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引用次数: 8

摘要

背景:有强有力的证据表明,社会支持,特别是感知到的社会支持,是健康的一个保护因素。很少有研究调查医学生如何感知他们所经历的社会支持类型。目的:了解骨科医学院学生如何感知社会支持,了解影响其感知的因素,并探讨小组参与课程、学术项目如何影响学生的感知。方法:在这项针对中西部一所多校区骨科医学院983名医学生的横断面研究中,潜在的受访者于2018年3月通过电子邮件邀请他们参与一项自我报告的社会支持感知评估,使用40个问题的人际支持评估表(ISEL)。人口统计变量包括性别、种族、年龄、医学院当前阶段、西班牙裔血统、校园分配和家乡人口类型。计算了每种社会支持类型的总分和总体感知社会支持的总结性得分。描述性统计应用于提供研究变量分布的总结。采用学生t检验和方差分析(ANOVA)统计进行双变量分析,确定4种社会支持结构和所有研究变量的总体社会支持分布;α < 0.05认为有统计学意义。采用线性回归分析来确定所有研究变量与4种社会支持结构之间的关系。计算两两相互作用,以确定关联是否因任何研究变量而不同。结果:自尊支持是总样本中最低的感知社会支持类型(mean [SD], 23.5[2.0])。西班牙裔学生报告的总体平均感知社会支持低于不认为自己是西班牙裔的学生(100比104;P = .04点)。年长的研究参与者比年轻的参与者有更高的平均有形支持(26.25比25.60,P= 0.018;t[264] = 1.18)。与年轻人相比,年龄较大的研究参与者也有更高的平均评价支持度(26.57比25.92,P=.06;t[266] = 1.27)。女医学生报告的归属感支持总体水平较低(平均值[标准差]26.79,[2.10])。来自农村老家的学生比其他任何群体都有更高的归属感和支持。郊区和城市女大学生的归属感支持水平低于农村女大学生(Adj. β=-0.96, P= 0.01)。参加农村和城市服务不足项目的学生比没有参加农村和城市服务不足项目的学生有更高的自尊支持(Adj. β=-1.30, P= 0.05)。医学教育临床阶段的学生归属感支持水平低于临床前阶段的学生(26.14 vs. 26.69, P= 0.05;t[256] = 1.07)。结论:了解医学生体验社会支持的方式及其影响因素至关重要。长期跟踪医学生的纵向研究将有助于更全面地了解医学生从临床前阶段进入临床阶段的社会支持情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Toward Resilience: Medical Students' Perception of Social Support.

Context: There is strong evidence that social support-particularly perceived social support-functions as a protective factor for health. Few studies have investigated how medical students perceive the types of social support they experience.

Objective: To determine how osteopathic medical students perceive social support, understand the factors that influence their perceptions, and explore how group participation in a cocurricular, academic program could affect student perceptions.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study of 983 medical students at a multicampus osteopathic medical school in the Midwest, potential respondents were invited by email in March 2018 to participate in a self-reported evaluation of their perceived social support using a 40-question Interpersonal Support Evaluation List (ISEL). The demographic variables included gender, race, age, current phase in medical school, Hispanic heritage, campus assignment, and hometown population type. A total score for each type of social support and a summative score for overall perceived social support were calculated. Descriptive statistics were applied to provide a summary of the distribution of study variables. Bivariate analyses were conducted using student t test and analysis of variance (ANOVA) statistic to determine distribution of 4 social support constructs and overall social support by all the study variables; α < .05 was considered statistically significant. Linear regression analysis was performed to determine the association between all study variables and 4 social support constructs. Pairwise interactions were calculated to determine whether the association differed by any of the study variables.

Results: Self-esteem support was the lowest type of perceived social support overall in the total sample (mean [SD], 23.5[2.0]). Hispanic students reported lower overall mean perceived social support than those who did not identify as Hispanic (100 vs 104; P=.04). Older study participants had higher mean tangible support compared with their younger counterparts (26.25 vs. 25.60, P=.018; t [264]=1.18). Older study participants also had higher mean appraisal support compared with their younger counterparts (26.57 vs. 25.92, P=.06; t [266]=1.27). Female medical students reported lower levels of belonging support overall (mean [SD] 26.79, [2.10]). Students from rural hometowns reported a higher sense of belonging support than any other group. Female students from suburban and urban hometowns reported lower levels of belonging support compared with women from rural hometowns (Adj. β=-0.96, P=.01). Students who participated in the rural and urban underserved program had higher self esteem support compared with those who did not participate in the rural and urban underserved program (Adj. β=-1.30, P=.05). Students in the clinical phase of medical education reported lower levels of belonging support than students in the preclinical phase (26.14 vs. 26.69, P=.05; t[256]=1.07).

Conclusions: It is critical to understand the ways medical students experience social support and the factors that contribute to it. Longitudinal studies following medical students over time would contribute to a more complete understanding of social support in medical students as they move from preclinical to the clinical phases of medical school.

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来源期刊
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
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期刊介绍: JAOA—The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association is the official scientific publication of the American Osteopathic Association, as well as the premier scholarly, peer-reviewed publication of the osteopathic medical profession. The JAOA"s mission is to advance medicine through the scholarly publication of peer-reviewed osteopathic medical research. The JAOA"s goals are: 1. To be the authoritative scholarly publication of the osteopathic medical profession 2. To advance the traditional tenets of osteopathic medicine while encouraging the development of emerging concepts relevant to the profession"s distinctiveness
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