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Biomedical students’ course preference and links with quality of life and psychological distress

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posted on 2021-06-15, 03:01 authored by Marcus HeningMarcus Hening, Vanamali JosephVanamali Joseph, Roger J Booth, Christian U Krägeloh, Craig S Webster

Abstract

Introduction: This study investigates psychological distress and quality of life (QoL) amongst first year premedical and health science students. The primary aim of this study was to investigate potential differences in QoL and psychological distress between students who sought entry into a medicine programme when compared to those opting for a non-medicine career.

Methods: We examined participant responses to measures of QoL, psychological distress, and course preference (medicine or other). A structural equation model was conducted to consider the interrelationships among future course preference, gender, QoL, depression, anxiety and stress.

Results: Three hundred and sixty five students completed the online survey. An a priori conceptual model was developed and then evaluated using a structural equation model. The values obtained for RMSEA (0.027), CFI (0.999), and SRMR (0.016) indicated an excellent model fit. The overall model fit statistic, chi-square (χ2 = 7.626, df=6, p= .267), confirmed a good model fit. The standardized regression weights showed that course preference predicted psychological health QoL and environmental QoL. Physical QoL and psychological health QoL scores significantly predicted psychological distress measures.

Conclusion: The study raises a potential debate regarding placing students with mixed career intentions into the same course and the potential implications this may have on teaching in interprofessional and large student groups in relation to wellbeing, pedagogy, equity, and expenditure. The findings clearly indicated that medical students are not as adversely impacted upon in terms of QoL and psychological distress compared with their non-medical peers.

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