Hassan Nadira Mansour, Hammad Rabab Ahmed, Karem Amira Ahmed Abd El
Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Community Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta City, Egypt.
BMC Psychol. 2025 Jul 3;13(1):724. doi: 10.1186/s40359-025-03032-0.
Exposure to unfavorable environmental circumstances including conflicts and wars increases people's risk of experiencing mental health disturbances. Prevalence rates of anxiety, depression and stress disorders were two- to three-fold higher between people exposed to war or those interested in war news.
To explore prevalence of depression, anxiety and stress among Tanta University students and their parents representing different Egyptian generations, and to identify associated and predicting factors of severity and their effect on study or work performance.
A cross-sectional study was conducted to collect data from undergraduate medical students at Tanta University and their parents by using random cluster sampling technique. The study included 100 medical students and 200 parents. A self-administrated questionnaire was used, which included sociodemographic data, DASS-21 (Depression, Anxiety Stress Scale) to measure levels of depression, anxiety and stress. Also, the questionnaire included a part to assess the effect of war on studying /or work performance. Multiple logistic regression was used to detect predictors of severe levels of depression, anxiety and stress. The value of p ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. The data were analyzed using SPSS version 21.0.
Females constituted 79.0% of the student sample. All students and most fathers and mothers reported regularly following war news, with social media being the most frequently used source, especially among students. Symptoms of depression were reported by 97.0% of students, 77.0% of mothers, and 65.0% of fathers. Anxiety and stress were reported by approximately two-thirds of students, 51.0% of mothers, and 45.0% of fathers. Multiple logistic regression analysis identified frequent exposure to war news as a shared significant predictor of severe and extremely severe levels of depression (p = 0.004), anxiety, and stress (p < 0.001). Additionally, young age (p < 0.001) and female sex (p = 0.023) were significant predictors of depression, while urban residence was significantly associated with severe anxiety (p = 0.007). Students' motivation to study and study hours were affected to some degree but among most parents, work performance was not affected (p < 0.001).
The mental health of people in a country outside of war can also be significantly affected by war and its news. The students representing the younger generation were following war news frequently and were the worst affected generation. Thus, these findings highlight the importance of mental health screening and early intervention in populations not directly exposed to war but affected through media consumption, particularly across different generations.
暴露于包括冲突和战争在内的不利环境中会增加人们出现心理健康问题的风险。在经历战争的人群或关注战争新闻的人群中,焦虑、抑郁和应激障碍的患病率高出两到三倍。
探讨代表埃及不同代际的坦塔大学学生及其父母中抑郁、焦虑和应激的患病率,并确定严重程度的相关因素和预测因素及其对学习或工作表现的影响。
采用随机整群抽样技术进行横断面研究,从坦塔大学的本科医学生及其父母中收集数据。该研究包括100名医学生和200名家长。使用了一份自填式问卷,其中包括社会人口学数据、用于测量抑郁、焦虑和应激水平的DASS-21(抑郁、焦虑、压力量表)。此外,问卷还包括一部分,用于评估战争对学习/或工作表现的影响。采用多元逻辑回归来检测抑郁、焦虑和应激严重程度的预测因素。p≤0.05的值被认为具有统计学意义。使用SPSS 21.0版本对数据进行分析。
女性占学生样本的79.0%。所有学生以及大多数父亲和母亲都报告经常关注战争新闻,社交媒体是最常用的来源,尤其是在学生中。97.0%的学生、77.0%的母亲和65.0%的父亲报告有抑郁症状。约三分之二的学生、51.0%的母亲和45.0%的父亲报告有焦虑和应激症状。多元逻辑回归分析确定,频繁接触战争新闻是抑郁(p = 0.004)、焦虑和应激严重及极其严重水平的共同显著预测因素(p < 0.001)。此外,年轻(p < 0.001)和女性(p = 0.023)是抑郁的显著预测因素,而城市居住与严重焦虑显著相关(p = 0.007)。学生的学习动力和学习时间在一定程度上受到影响,但在大多数家长中,工作表现未受影响(p < 0.001)。
一个未处于战争状态国家的人们的心理健康也会受到战争及其新闻的显著影响。代表年轻一代的学生频繁关注战争新闻,是受影响最严重的一代。因此,这些发现凸显了对未直接接触战争但通过媒体消费受到影响的人群,尤其是不同代际人群进行心理健康筛查和早期干预的重要性。