Leich Marvik, Guse Jennifer, Bergelt Corinna
Department of Medical Psychology, University Medicine Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
Department of Medical Psychology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2025 Mar 25;16:1526960. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1526960. eCollection 2025.
Medical students experience significantly more mental burdens compared to the general public. This circumstance was further exacerbated by the pandemic, particularly with regard to loneliness. While previous studies have identified risk factors for loneliness among students of different subjects, recent data focusing on medical students during the late stages of the pandemic remain insufficient. This study aims to address this gap.
We performed a cross-sectional study at a German Medical School, consisting of two online surveys conducted in winter 2021/22 and summer 2022. The study sample, composed of 283 undergraduate students in winter 2021/22 (231 in summer 2022), answered five well-established scales for measuring loneliness (R-UCLA3), distress (DT-NCCN), anxiety (GAD-2), depression (PHQ-2), and perceived stress (PPS-4). Additionally, we evaluated burdensome aspects of students' current situation through qualitative analysis. Longitudinal analyses were conducted for 80 medical students who participated in both surveys.
Around 20% of all students responded to each survey. In winter 2021/22, 55.1% of students reported loneliness above the cut-off ( = 5.77 [2.02]; decreasing to 45.0% by summer 2022 ( = 5.22 [1.90]). Lonely students reported significantly higher levels of depression, anxiety, and self-perceived stress in both survey periods. Overall distress increased substantially throughout our study (Cohen's = -0.54). Binary regression models indicated a shift in loneliness risk factors: in winter 2021/22, being single, higher self-perceived stress levels, and decreased study motivation were associated with increased loneliness. Lower peer connectedness emerged as the sole significant factor associated with loneliness in summer 2022. While the pandemic-related burden on students' study motivation lessened, issues related to exam preparation and lack of study organization through the faculty increased, varying significantly depending on students' study year.
Our data suggest that loneliness among German medical students decreased in the late stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, other mental burdens persisted at high levels compared to other data in the general public and medical students. Students' responses underscore the need for improved academic support by eased study program structure, improved counseling, and tailored services for students of different study years.
与普通公众相比,医学生承受着更多的心理负担。疫情使这种情况进一步恶化,尤其是在孤独感方面。虽然先前的研究已经确定了不同学科学生孤独感的风险因素,但近期关于疫情后期医学生的相关数据仍然不足。本研究旨在填补这一空白。
我们在一所德国医学院进行了一项横断面研究,包括在2021/22年冬季和2022年夏季进行的两项在线调查。研究样本包括2021/22年冬季的283名本科生(2022年夏季为231名),他们回答了五个成熟的量表,用于测量孤独感(R-UCLA3)、痛苦感(DT-NCCN)、焦虑感(GAD-2)、抑郁感(PHQ-2)和感知压力(PPS-4)。此外,我们通过定性分析评估了学生当前状况中令人负担的方面。对参与两项调查的80名医学生进行了纵向分析。
每次调查中约20%的学生做出了回应。在2021/22年冬季,55.1%的学生报告孤独感高于临界值(M = 5.77 [2.02]);到2022年夏季降至45.0%(M = 5.22 [1.90])。在两个调查阶段,孤独的学生报告的抑郁、焦虑和自我感知压力水平显著更高。在我们的研究过程中,总体痛苦感大幅增加(科恩d = -0.54)。二元回归模型表明孤独风险因素发生了变化:在2021/22年冬季,单身、较高的自我感知压力水平和学习动力下降与孤独感增加有关。较低的同伴联系成为2022年夏季与孤独感相关的唯一显著因素。虽然疫情对学生学习动力的负担减轻了,但与考试准备和学院缺乏学习组织相关的问题增加了,这因学生的学习年份不同而有显著差异。
我们的数据表明,在新冠疫情后期,德国医学生的孤独感有所下降。然而,与普通公众和医学生的其他数据相比,其他心理负担仍然处于较高水平。学生的回答强调了通过优化学习计划结构、改善咨询服务以及为不同学习年份的学生提供量身定制的服务来加强学业支持的必要性。