Ali Kamran, Zahra Daniel, Bashir Ulfat, Daud Alaa, Raja Hina Zafar, Witton Rob, Raja Mahwish
Qatar University, QU Health College of Dental Medicine, Doha, 2713, Qatar.
Plymouth University, School of Psychology, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, UK.
BDJ Open. 2024 Oct 18;10(1):80. doi: 10.1038/s41405-024-00263-y.
Mental health issues are being reported increasingly amongst healthcare staff and students globally. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of common mental health issues amongst dental faculty members at multiple institutions in Pakistan.
Following approval from the institutional ethics review board, dental faculty members at 14 dental institutions were invited to participate in an online survey based on globally validated scales for mental health problems including the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), and the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale (DASS-21). Two open-ended questions were included in the survey to identify perceived factors contributing to poor mental health and recommendations for improving institutional support.
A total of 200 faculty members out of provided their responses to the survey questionnaire but complete responses were provided by 183 participants which included 120 (65.57%) females, and 63 (34.43%) males. The total number of faculty members at the participating institutions was 426 and 183 responses translated into an overall response rate of 43%. Most participants were in the 31-40 years age-group (n = 81, 44.26%) followed by 25-30 year (n = 51, 22.87%) and 41-50 years (n = 40, 21.86%). The mean score on PHQ-9 was 6.51 (SD ± 5.4) while the mean DASS-21 score was 13.04 (SD ± 10.95). PHQ-9 Depression, and DASS-21 Depression, Anxiety, and Stress scores were all significantly positively correlated for the whole sample, and within each subgroup of each demographic factor. Job-related workload, lack of institutional support, financial limitations, and poor work life balance were identified as the main factors contributing adversely to the mental health of the participants.
This study provides useful insights into the scale of mental health status amongst dental faculty members at 14 institutions in Pakistan. Underlying factors affecting the mental health of faculty members adversely were identified and recommendations are provided to address these challenges.
全球范围内,医护人员和学生中报告的心理健康问题日益增多。本研究的目的是调查巴基斯坦多个机构中牙科教员常见心理健康问题的发生频率。
在获得机构伦理审查委员会的批准后,邀请了14所牙科机构的牙科教员参与一项基于全球认可的心理健康问题量表的在线调查,这些量表包括患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)以及抑郁、焦虑和压力量表(DASS-21)。调查中包含两个开放式问题,以确定导致心理健康不佳的感知因素以及改善机构支持的建议。
共有200名教员回复了调查问卷,但183名参与者提供了完整回复,其中包括120名(65.57%)女性和63名(34.43%)男性。参与机构的教员总数为426名,183份回复转化为总体回复率为43%。大多数参与者年龄在31至40岁之间(n = 81,44.26%),其次是25至30岁(n = 51,22.87%)和41至50岁(n = 40,21.86%)。PHQ-9的平均得分为6.51(标准差±5.4),而DASS-21的平均得分为13.04(标准差±10.95)。对于整个样本以及每个人口统计学因素的每个亚组,PHQ-9抑郁量表、DASS-21抑郁、焦虑和压力量表的得分均呈显著正相关。与工作相关的工作量、缺乏机构支持、经济限制以及工作与生活平衡不佳被确定为对参与者心理健康产生不利影响的主要因素。
本研究为巴基斯坦14所机构中牙科教员的心理健康状况规模提供了有用的见解。确定了对教员心理健康产生不利影响的潜在因素,并提供了应对这些挑战的建议。