Distress Among Matriculating Medical Students Relative to the General Population

Chantal M. L. R. Brazeau(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Tait D. Shanafelt(Mayo Clinic), Steven J. Durning(Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences), F. Stanford Massie(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Anne Eacker(University of Washington), Christine Moutier(Executive Office of the President), Daniel Satele(Mayo Clinic), Jeff A. Sloan(Mayo Clinic), Liselotte N. Dyrbye(Mayo Clinic)
Academic Medicine
September 24, 2014
Cited by 421

Abstract

PURPOSE: Many medical students experience distress during medical school. If matriculating medical students (MMSs) begin training with similar or better mental health than age-similar controls, this would support existing concerns about the negative impact of training on student well-being. The authors compared mental health indicators of MMSs versus those of a probability-based sample of the general U.S. population. METHOD: In 2012 all MMSs at six U.S. medical schools were invited to participate in a survey during orientation. The research team surveyed a probability-based sample of U.S. individuals using the same questions in 2011. Individuals from the population sample who completed a four-year college degree and matched within the appropriate age strata (< 30, 31-35, 36-40, > 40) were compared with MMSs. Surveys included demographics and validated instruments to measure burnout; depression symptoms; and mental, emotional, physical, and overall of quality of life (QOL). RESULTS: Demographic characteristics of the 582/938 (62%) responding MMSs were similar to U.S. MMSs. Relative to 546 age-similar college graduates, MMSs had lower rates of burnout (27.3% versus 37.3%, P < .001) and depression symptoms (26.2% versus 42.4%, P < .0001) and higher scores across the four QOL domains assessed relative to controls (all P < .0001). These findings persisted on multivariate analysis after adjusting for age, sex, relationship status, and race/ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS: These findings, along with high rates of distress reported in medical students and residents, support concerns that the training process and environment contribute to the deterioration of mental health in developing physicians.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis