School of Medicine, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Kenyatta National Hospital, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMC Psychiatry. 2021 Sep 8;21(1):444. doi: 10.1186/s12888-021-03439-0.
Little data exists regarding depression and its associated factors in medical residents and doctors in Sub-Saharan Africa. Residents are at high risk of developing depression owing to the stressful nature of their medical practice and academic training. Depression in medical residents leads to decreased clinical efficiency, and poor academic performance; it can also lead to substance abuse and suicide. Our primary aim was to measure depression prevalence among medical residents in Kenya's largest national teaching and referral hospital. Secondary aims were to describe how depression was associated with perceived stress, perceived social support, substance use, and educational environment.
We sampled 338 residents belonging to 8 different specialties using self administered questionnaires in this cross-sectional survey between October 2019 and February 2020. Questionnaires included: sociodemographics, the Centres for Epidemiology Depression Scale - Revised, Perceived Stress Scale, Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test, and Postgraduate Hospital Educational Environment Measure. Bivariate and multivariate linear regression were used to assess for risk factors for depression.
Mean participant age was 31.8 years and 53.4% were males. Most residents (70.4%) reported no to mild depressive symptoms, 12.7% had moderate, and 16.9% had severe depressive symptoms. Most residents had high social support (71.8%) and moderate stress (61.6%). The educational environment was rated as more positive than negative by 46.3% of residents. Bivariate analyses revealed significant correlations between depressive symptoms, perceived stress, substance use, perceived social support, and educational environment. Multivariate analysis showed that depression was strongly associated with: fewer hours of sleep (β = - 0.683, p = 0.002), high perceived stress (β = 0.709, p < 0.001) and low perceived social support (β = - 2.19, p < 0.001).
Only 30% of medical residents in our study had moderate and severe depressive symptoms. Most residents in our study reported high levels of social support, and moderate levels of stress. Though their overall appraisal of medical residency experience was positive, mental health support and self-care skills in the training of medical professionals needs prioritization.
在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,有关医学住院医师和医生的抑郁及其相关因素的数据很少。由于医疗实践和学术培训的压力性质,住院医师面临着患抑郁的高风险。住院医师抑郁会导致临床效率降低,学业成绩不佳;还可能导致药物滥用和自杀。我们的主要目的是衡量肯尼亚最大的国立教学和转诊医院的住院医师的抑郁患病率。次要目的是描述抑郁与感知压力、感知社会支持、物质使用和教育环境之间的关系。
我们在 2019 年 10 月至 2020 年 2 月期间进行了这项横断面调查,对 8 个不同专业的 338 名住院医师进行了自我管理问卷调查。问卷包括:社会人口统计学、中心抑郁量表修订版、感知压力量表、多维感知社会支持量表、酒精、吸烟和物质使用筛查测试以及住院医师医院教育环境量表。使用单变量和多变量线性回归来评估抑郁的危险因素。
参与者的平均年龄为 31.8 岁,其中 53.4%为男性。大多数住院医师(70.4%)报告没有轻度抑郁症状,12.7%有中度抑郁症状,16.9%有重度抑郁症状。大多数住院医师的社会支持度较高(71.8%),压力适中(61.6%)。46.3%的住院医师认为教育环境比负面评价更为积极。单变量分析显示,抑郁症状、感知压力、物质使用、感知社会支持和教育环境之间存在显著相关性。多变量分析显示,抑郁与以下因素密切相关:睡眠时间减少(β=-0.683,p=0.002)、感知压力高(β=0.709,p<0.001)和感知社会支持低(β=-2.19,p<0.001)。
在我们的研究中,只有 30%的住院医师有中度和重度抑郁症状。我们研究中的大多数住院医师报告说社会支持度较高,压力水平适中。尽管他们对住院医师经历的总体评价是积极的,但在培训医学专业人员时需要优先考虑心理健康支持和自我保健技能。