Schrenk Delaney, Kaghazchi Aydin
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Acad Psychiatry. 2025 Jun 26. doi: 10.1007/s40596-025-02164-0.
This pilot study assessed the acceptability of an online network where medical students could seek advice from alumni regarding social and academic challenges. Objectives included assembling a critical mass of students and alumni who would be interested and determining if alumni's past experiences overlap with current student challenges and what communication modalities both parties would use.
A survey was sent to first-, second-, and third-year medical students at the University of Cincinnati to gauge interest and to see which experiences they would want support for. It was advertised through emails, newsletters, posters, and social media. A similar survey was sent to alumni who graduated in the past 5 years. Responses were collected over 3 months.
Responses from 78 of 535 (15%) students and 36 alumni were collected, with 71% (55/78) of students and 91% (33/36) of alumni being interested. The most common topics for both groups were burnout, depression, anxiety, loneliness, and ending a relationship. There was at least one alumnus for each experience. Of 31 alumni and 57 students who answered how to meet, 61% of alumni preferred phone for first contact, and 85% of students preferred virtual meetings.
The results suggest that creating a student-alumni network was acceptable due to similar demographics and overlapping experiences. The data indicated that students could contact alumni by phone to discuss how to meet given the diversity of student preferences. This resource could be explored at other medical schools as a novel means of support.
本试点研究评估了一个在线网络的可接受性,医学生可以在该网络上就社交和学业挑战向校友寻求建议。目标包括召集大量感兴趣的学生和校友,确定校友过去的经历是否与当前学生面临的挑战有重叠,以及双方会使用何种沟通方式。
向辛辛那提大学的一、二、三年级医学生发送了一项调查,以衡量他们的兴趣,并了解他们希望在哪方面获得支持。通过电子邮件、时事通讯、海报和社交媒体进行了宣传。向过去5年毕业的校友发送了类似的调查。在3个月内收集了回复。
共收集到535名学生中的78名(15%)和36名校友的回复,71%(55/78)的学生和91%(33/36)的校友表示感兴趣。两组最常见的话题是职业倦怠、抑郁、焦虑、孤独和结束一段关系。每种经历都至少有一名校友。在回答如何见面的31名校友和57名学生中,61%的校友首选电话进行首次联系,85%的学生更喜欢虚拟会议。
结果表明,由于人口统计学特征相似和经历重叠,创建一个学生-校友网络是可行的。数据表明,鉴于学生偏好的多样性,学生可以通过电话联系校友讨论见面事宜。这一资源可在其他医学院校作为一种新的支持方式进行探索。