Department of English, Institute of Foreign Languages, China Medical University, 110122, Shenyang, China.
Department of Public Health Sciences, College of Medicine, Pennsylvania State University, 17033, Hershey, PA, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2022 Jan 1;296:315-321. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.09.095. Epub 2021 Oct 1.
The majority of medical students in China have experienced home confinement and a reliance on online resources to study medicine since the outbreak of COVID-19. More time spent studying online during the COVID-19 pandemic may be a potential risk factor for problematic smartphone use, since smartphones have become the most commonly used device for accessing the internet. The objective of the present study was to explore the association between anxiety, smartphone problematic use and sleep disturbance among medical students during the enforced COVID-19 home confinement.
Altogether, 666 medical students validly answered a self-administered questionnaire, which included the Chinese version of the Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale, Smartphone addiction scale - short version, and the PROMIS Sleep Disturbance scale (short form). Hierarchical multiple regression analyses were employed to explore the associated factors of anxiety. Structural equation modeling was conducted to test hypothesized associations.
Anxiety was significantly associated with problematic smartphone use and sleep disturbance among medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Problematic smartphone use not only directly affected anxiety, but also exerted a significant indirect effect on anxiety via sleep disturbance. A significant decrease of the path coefficient of problematic smartphone use on anxiety (from β=0.53 to β=0.22, P<0.01) was observed with sleep disturbance being modeled as a mediator.
Limitations include its cross-sectional design and samples recruited from only one medical school.
The detrimental impact of problematic smartphone use and the importance of sleep health on mitigating anxiety should be highlighted and incorporated into medical education.
自 COVID-19 爆发以来,中国大多数医学生都经历过居家隔离和依赖在线资源学习医学。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,更多的时间花在在线学习上可能是智能手机使用问题的一个潜在风险因素,因为智能手机已成为最常用的上网设备。本研究的目的是探讨 COVID-19 强制居家隔离期间医学生焦虑、智能手机使用问题与睡眠障碍之间的关系。
共有 666 名医学生有效回答了一份自我管理问卷,其中包括中文版广泛性焦虑障碍量表、智能手机成瘾量表-短版和 PROMIS 睡眠障碍量表(短版)。采用分层多元回归分析探讨焦虑的相关因素。结构方程模型用于检验假设的关联。
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,焦虑与医学生的智能手机使用问题和睡眠障碍显著相关。智能手机使用问题不仅直接影响焦虑,还通过睡眠障碍对焦虑产生显著的间接影响。当睡眠障碍被建模为中介时,智能手机使用问题对焦虑的路径系数显著降低(从β=0.53 降至β=0.22,P<0.01)。
本研究存在一些局限性,包括其横断面设计和仅从一所医学院招募的样本。
应强调智能手机使用问题的有害影响以及睡眠健康对减轻焦虑的重要性,并将其纳入医学教育中。