Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Torino, Torino, Italy.
A.O.U. City of Health and Science of Torino, Torino, Italy.
PLoS One. 2020 Apr 17;15(4):e0231845. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231845. eCollection 2020.
Four percent of the world's population suffers from depression, which is a major public health issue. Medical students are at risk, as their depressive symptoms (DS) prevalence is reported to be approximately 27% worldwide. Since few data on Italian medical students exist, this study aimed to estimate their DS prevalence and assess risk and protective factors.
The PRIMES was a multicentre cross-sectional study performed in 12 Italian medical schools. Questionnaires were self-reported and included 30 sociodemographic items and the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II). The primary outcome was the presence of DS (BDI-II score≥14). The main analyses were chi-squared tests and multivariable logistic regressions with a p-value<0.05 considered significant.
The number of collected questionnaires was 2,513 (117 BDI-II incomplete). Females accounted for 61.3% of the respondents, and the median age was 22 years (IQR = 4). The prevalence of DS was 29.5%. Specifically, 14.0% had mild depression, 11.1% had moderate depression, and 4.5% had severe depression. The main risk factors for DS were age, being female, bisexual/asexual orientation, living with partner/housemates, poor economic status (worsened by living far from home), less than 90 min of weekly exercise, relatives with psychiatric disorders, personal chronic disease, judging medical school choice negatively, unsatisfying friendships with classmates, competitive and hostile climate among classmates, thinking that medical school hinders specific activities and being worried about not measuring up to the profession. Protective factors included family cohesion, hobbies, intellectual curiosity as a career motivation and no worries about the future.
Italian medical students are at high risk of reporting DS, similar to the global population of medical students'. Medical schools must make efforts to implement preventive and treatment interventions by offering counselling and working on modifiable factors, such as lifestyle and learning climate.
全球有 4%的人口患有抑郁症,这是一个主要的公共卫生问题。医学生面临风险,因为他们的抑郁症状(DS)患病率据报道在全球约为 27%。由于意大利医学生的数据很少,因此本研究旨在估计他们的 DS 患病率,并评估风险和保护因素。
PRIMES 是一项在 12 所意大利医学院进行的多中心横断面研究。问卷采用自我报告的方式,包括 30 项社会人口学项目和贝克抑郁量表第二版(BDI-II)。主要结局是存在 DS(BDI-II 评分≥14)。主要分析包括卡方检验和多变量逻辑回归,p 值<0.05 被认为有统计学意义。
共收集了 2513 份问卷(117 份 BDI-II 不完整)。女性占受访者的 61.3%,中位数年龄为 22 岁(IQR=4)。DS 的患病率为 29.5%。具体而言,14.0%有轻度抑郁,11.1%有中度抑郁,4.5%有重度抑郁。DS 的主要危险因素是年龄、女性、双性恋/无性恋取向、与伴侣/室友同住、经济状况较差(离家越远越差)、每周锻炼少于 90 分钟、有精神疾病家族史、慢性疾病、对医学院选择的负面评价、与同学的友谊不令人满意、同学之间竞争和敌对的氛围、认为医学院阻碍了特定的活动以及担心达不到职业要求。保护因素包括家庭凝聚力、爱好、将求知欲作为职业动力以及对未来不担忧。
意大利医学生报告 DS 的风险很高,与全球医学生群体相似。医学院必须努力通过提供咨询和解决生活方式和学习氛围等可改变的因素来实施预防和治疗干预。