COVID-19大流行。墨西哥医科学生的社会心理方法

Diego Ortega-Moreno, Edgar Botello-Hernández, Rebeca Aguayo-Samaniego, P. García-Espinosa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:如今,COVID-19大流行对世界各地学生的影响已经不是什么秘密;由于SARS-CoV-2感染而失去现状,改变了日常生活的概念。就失去理论和实验室实践以及急需与病人接触而言,医学生是一个重要的受影响人群,这些因素增加了大学生的基本压力和与社会群体的疏远。本研究试图确定医学生的情感和社会领域的影响,除了确定风险因素、预测因素或诱发因素,以显示健康的社会心理因素的变化。方法对墨西哥医科学生进行横断面研究;样本数量为366。采用82项问卷对4个主轴进行评估;使用广泛性焦虑障碍(GAD-7)和患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)评估焦虑和抑郁的患病率,并评估COVID-19的知识、认知和社会决定因素。研究样本被分为两组,一组有抑郁/焦虑,另一组没有焦虑/抑郁。焦虑/抑郁的可能存在被定义为两个量表得分≥10分。随机抽取500名学生,邀请他们参加,并自愿签署知情同意书。没有完成所有答案的学生被排除在外。非参数定量变量采用Mann-Whitney U,定性变量采用χ2或Fisher精确检验。还使用了Spearman相关,并进行了二元逻辑回归来确定关联。结果共纳入384名学生,平均年龄21岁。女性学生236人(61.45%),临床学期(第7 ~ 12学期)154人(40.1%)。89.34%(343名)的学生表示他们最担心的是家庭成员生病、经济(71.51%)和大规模再感染(68.44%)。在大流行开始前,61.19%(235名学生)报告焦虑症状有中度至夸张的增加,75%(287名学生)报告抑郁情绪症状。320名学生(83.33%)报告被正确告知;他们了解COVID-19的症状、个人防护装备的使用和神话。我们发现43% (PHQ-)有抑郁,24.5%有焦虑(GAD-7);抑郁增加了表现焦虑的风险,反之亦然,这两组人都认为自己是女性,并且之前都被诊断出患有精神疾病。属于临床学期被发现是焦虑和抑郁的保护因素。结论学生抑郁、焦虑症状有所增加,对家庭和经济状况的担忧也有所增加。学术机构必须设计有效的策略,以便尽早发现和治疗,并利用适应突发事件的创新资源提高学生的复原力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The COVID-19 Pandemic. A Psychosocial Approach in Mexican Medical Students
Background: Nowadays the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on students around the world is not a secret; the loss of the status quo as a consequence of the SARS-CoV-2 infection, changed the concept of everyday life. Medical students represent an important affected population in terms of loss of theorical, laboratory practices, as well as the much-needed exposure to patients, are factors that add to the baseline stress of being a college student and alienation from social groups. The present study sought to establish the impact on the emotional and social spheres of medical students, in addition to establishing risk factors, predictors or predisposing factors to present alterations in in the psychosocial elements of health. Methods Cross-sectional study performed in Mexican Medical Students; the sample size was found to be 366. An 82-item questionnaire was applied to assess 4 main axes; Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) and the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) were used to evaluate prevalence of anxiety and depression, COVID-19 knowledge, perception, and social determinants were also evaluated. The study sample was divided into 2 groups to address a group with depression/anxiety and a group with no anxiety/depression. The possible presence of anxiety/depression was defined as a score ≥10 on both scales. 500 students were randomly chosen, were invited to participate, and voluntarily signing the informed consent. Students who did not complete all answers were excluded. Non-parametric quantitative variables were evaluated with Mann-Whitney U, qualitative variables with χ2 or Fisher’s exact test. Spearman’s correlation was also used, and a binary logistic regression was done to identify association. Results A total of 384 students were included with a mean age of 21 years. The majority, 236 students, were women (61.45%) and 154 (40.1%) belonged to the clinical semesters of the career (7th to 12th semester). 89.34% (343 students) stated that their main concern was that a family member became ill, the economy (71.51%), and massive reinfection (68.44%). A moderate to exaggerated increase in anxiety symptomatology before the start of the pandemic was reported in 61.19% (235 students), 75% (287 students) reported depressed mood symptoms. 320 students (83.33%) reported having been correctly informed; they were aware of COVID-19 symptomatology, use of protective personal equipment, and myths. We found that 43% (PHQ-) had depression and 24.5% anxiety (GAD-7); having depression increased the risk of presenting anxiety and vice-versa along with identifying themselves as a woman and having a diagnosis of a prior psychiatric disorder for both groups. Belonging to clinical semesters was found to be as a protective factor for both anxiety and depression. Conclusion The results indicate an increase in the depressive and anxiety symptomatology of the students, as well as concerns for their families and the economic situation. Academic institutions must design effective strategies for early detection, treatment and increase resilience of students using innovative resources adapted to the contingency.
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