Department of Behavioral Sciences, University of Szeged, Mars tér 20, 6722, Szeged, Hungary.
Department of Sociology & Criminology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Jul 27;23(1):537. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04522-8.
Medical students are at high risk for sleep disturbance. One possible cause of their sleeping problem is impulsivity. We aim to investigate the possible mediators between medical students' impulsivity and sleep outcomes. Thus, we developed and investigated a model where the predictors were attentional, non-planning, and motor impulsivity subtraits. In the final model, subjective cognitive capacity decrease was the outcome variable. In light of previous findings, academic procrastination, smartphone addiction, and bedtime procrastination were considered important mediators as well as two variables of poor sleep, sleeping insufficiency, and daytime fatigue.
Medical students (N = 211; age = 22.15 years; age = 3.47 years; 71.6% women) were recruited to complete an online survey comprised of demographics (age, gender), self-administered scales (Abbreviated Impulsiveness Scale, Bedtime Procrastination Scale, Abbreviated Impulsiveness Scale, Academic Procrastination Scale-Short Form) and questions on tiredness, daily fatigue and subjective cognitive capacity decrease. Correlation and path analyses were implemented to examine hypothesized relationships between the variables.
Both attentional impulsivity (β = 0.33, p < .001) and non-planning impulsivity (β = -0.19, p < .01) had a direct relationship with cognitive capacity decrease. Attentional impulsivity was also associated with decreased cognitive capacity with a serial mediation effect via smartphone addiction, academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency and fatigue (estimate = 0.017, p < .01). The indirect link between non-planning impulsivity and cognitive capacity decrease was mediated by academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency and fatigue (estimate = 0.011, p < .01).
Inability to stay focused and plan tasks effectively (directly and indirectly) predicts poor sleep outcomes. This relationship is mediated by excessive smartphone use, academic procrastination, and bedtime procrastination. Our findings are relevant in light of self-regulatory learning, which is crucial in medical education. This is a recursive cycle of planning, emotion regulation, proper strategy selection and self-monitoring. Future interventions addressing attentional and non-planning impulsivity, problematic smartphone use, academic procrastination, and in turn, bedtime procrastination might make this routine more effective. In the conclusion section, practical implications of the results are discussed.
医学生睡眠障碍的风险较高。他们睡眠问题的一个可能原因是冲动。我们旨在研究医学生冲动与睡眠结果之间可能存在的中介因素。因此,我们开发并研究了一个模型,其中预测因子是注意力、非计划性和运动冲动特质。在最终模型中,主观认知能力下降是结果变量。鉴于之前的研究结果,学业拖延、智能手机成瘾和就寝时间拖延被认为是重要的中介因素,以及睡眠不足、白天疲劳和主观认知能力下降等两个变量。
我们招募了 211 名医学生(年龄 22.15 岁;标准差 3.47 岁;71.6%为女性)完成在线调查,包括人口统计学信息(年龄、性别)、自我评估量表(简短冲动量表、就寝时间拖延量表、简短冲动量表、学术拖延量表-简短形式)以及疲劳、日常疲劳和主观认知能力下降问题。进行了相关性和路径分析,以检验变量之间假设的关系。
注意力冲动(β=0.33,p<.001)和非计划性冲动(β=-0.19,p<.01)与认知能力下降直接相关。注意力冲动也与认知能力下降呈关联,其通过智能手机成瘾、学业拖延、就寝时间拖延、睡眠不足和疲劳的串联中介效应(估计值=0.017,p<.01)产生影响。非计划性冲动与认知能力下降的间接联系通过学业拖延、就寝时间拖延、睡眠不足和疲劳(估计值=0.011,p<.01)来介导。
无法集中注意力和有效地规划任务(直接和间接)预示着睡眠不佳的结果。这种关系由过度使用智能手机、学业拖延和就寝时间拖延来调节。鉴于自我调节学习的重要性,这对于医学教育至关重要,因此我们的研究结果具有相关性。这是一个规划、情绪调节、适当策略选择和自我监控的循环过程。未来针对注意力和非计划性冲动、有问题的智能手机使用、学业拖延以及随之而来的就寝时间拖延的干预措施可能会使这种常规更为有效。在结论部分,讨论了结果的实际意义。