Stress among local and international medical students
Închide
Conţinutul numărului revistei
Articolul precedent
Articolul urmator
202 4
Ultima descărcare din IBN:
2022-06-21 15:42
Căutarea după subiecte
similare conform CZU
159.942-057.875:378.61 (1)
Psihologie (3362)
Învățământ superior. Universități. Cursuri universitare (2562)
SM ISO690:2012
NABARI, Suleiman Mohammad. Stress among local and international medical students. In: One Health and Risk Management, 2021, nr. 2(4-S), p. 24. ISSN 2587-3458.
EXPORT metadate:
Google Scholar
Crossref
CERIF

DataCite
Dublin Core
One Health and Risk Management
Numărul 2(4-S) / 2021 / ISSN 2587-3458 /ISSNe 2587-3466

Stress among local and international medical students

CZU: 159.942-057.875:378.61

Pag. 24-24

Nabari Suleiman Mohammad
 
”Nicolae Testemițanu” State University of Medicine and Pharmacy
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 5 octombrie 2021


Rezumat

Introduction. The contemporary student lives in an extremely unstable and unpredicta-ble society, from all points of view and deficient in terms of sharing positive emotions. The continuous changes occurring in a student’s life require constant efforts, actions, visions, attitudes and new skills that he/she must develop in order to keep pace with the world and at the same time be useful to the society of which he is part. Lots of research has been done on stress among students, especially those involving med-ical, pharmacy and dentistry students. Fewer research is found on the stress of students studying in a foreign country, in a different language than the native one. Students find it challenging to adapt to a new way of life, to learn to cope on their own, starting with cook-ing and ending with all sorts of new things, which at home were usually performed by their parents, brothers and sisters. Material and methods. The research was based on comparing the level of stress among local and international students, using a questionnaire with 2 standardized tests (Test to identify instructional stress; Test of inventory of stress symptoms). The study involved 114 people: 51 local students and 63 international students. Results. The study findings show that the local students report a double score for all the complaints related to the instructional process. The complaints presented by the students indicate large variations in the score for various complaints at local students, with scores between 3.2 and 7 points (out of a maximum of 10 points). In the case of international students, even if the scores are lower for all the complaints presented, the amplitude of the variations is not large, being registered between 2.0 and 2.8 points (out of a maximum of 10 points). The highest score for the complaints presented by local students was the feeling of con-stant lack of time (7 points out of 10) , whereas for international students three groups of complaints ranked first viz. headaches; increased irritability, upset and distraction; (2.8 out of 10 points). On the second place, the complaints regarding the quality of sleep among the local students were registered (6.7 points out of 10), whereas among the international students - the irrelevant thoughts (2.7 points out of 10). Low work capacity and increased fatigue were ranked third among local students (6.5 points out of 10), while international students reported insufficient sleep, poor quality and lack of time (2.6 points out of 10). The inventory of stress symptoms showed that local students are more stressed than in-ternational ones. About a third of local students are exhausted, they have irreversible con-sequences due to stress. Most local students feel severe (39.2%) and pronounced (21.5%) stress. Only 5.9% of local students experienced moderate stress and 3.9% were not stressed. Half of the international students are stressed, and a quarter of students have moderate stress. Stress is missing in only a quarter of international students. Conclusions. Both the Instructional Stress Identification Test and the Inventory of Stress Symptoms recorded a higher level of stress among local students rather than in interna-tional ones. Early detection of symptoms is important to prevent stress. The interdepend-ent relationship between the perceived stress and symptoms of anxiety and depression suggests that one of the prevention strategies could even be the stress detection among first-year medical students.

Cuvinte-cheie
instruc-tional stress, local students, international students