Medical School, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2009 Sep 13;9:60. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-9-60.
Medical students report high levels of stress related to their medical training as well as to other personal and financial factors. The aim of this study is to investigate whether there are differences in course-related stressors reported by medical students on undergraduate problem-based learning (PBL) and non-PBL programmes in the UK.
A cross-sectional study of second-year medical students in two UK medical schools (one PBL and one non-PBL programme) was conducted. A 16-question self-report questionnaire, derived from the Perceived Medical Student Stress Scale and the Higher Education Stress Inventory, was used to measure course-related stressors. Following univariate analysis of each stressor between groups, multivariate logistic regression was used to determine which stressors were the best predictors of each course type, while controlling for socio-demographic differences between the groups.
A total of 280 students responded. Compared to the non-PBL students (N = 197), the PBL students (N = 83) were significantly more likely to agree that: they did not know what the faculty expected of them (Odds Ratio (OR) = 0.38, p = 0.03); there were too many small group sessions facilitated only by students resulting in an unclear curriculum (OR = 0.04, p < 0.0001); and that there was a lack of opportunity to explore academic subjects of interest (OR = 0.40, p = 0.02). They were significantly more likely to disagree that: there was a lack of encouragement from teachers (OR = 3.11, p = 0.02); and that the medical course fostered a sense of anonymity and feelings of isolation amongst students (OR = 3.42, p = 0.008).
There are significant differences in the perceived course-related stressors affecting medical students on PBL and non-PBL programmes. Course designers and student support services should therefore tailor their work to minimise, or help students cope with, the specific stressors on each course type to ensure optimum learning and wellbeing among our future doctors.
医学生报告称,他们在医学培训以及其他个人和经济因素方面承受着高度的压力。本研究旨在调查英国以问题为基础的学习(PBL)和非 PBL 课程的医学生报告的课程相关压力源是否存在差异。
对英国两所医学院的二年级医学生(一个 PBL 课程和一个非 PBL 课程)进行了横断面研究。使用源自感知医学生压力量表和高等教育压力量表的 16 个问题的自我报告问卷来衡量课程相关压力源。对组间每个压力源进行单变量分析后,使用多变量逻辑回归来确定哪些压力源是每种课程类型的最佳预测因素,同时控制组间社会人口统计学差异。
共有 280 名学生做出了回应。与非 PBL 学生(N = 197)相比,PBL 学生(N = 83)更有可能同意以下观点:他们不知道教师对他们的期望是什么(优势比(OR)= 0.38,p = 0.03);小组成员过多,仅由学生组织,导致课程不清晰(OR = 0.04,p < 0.0001);而且缺乏探索感兴趣的学术科目的机会(OR = 0.40,p = 0.02)。他们更有可能不同意以下观点:教师缺乏鼓励(OR = 3.11,p = 0.02);医学课程在学生中营造出一种匿名感和孤立感(OR = 3.42,p = 0.008)。
在 PBL 和非 PBL 课程的医学生中,课程相关压力源的感知存在显著差异。因此,课程设计者和学生支持服务应该根据需要调整工作,以最大程度地减少或帮助学生应对每种课程类型的特定压力源,以确保我们未来的医生能够最佳地学习和保持健康。