Stress And Its Related Factors Among Students Of Khawaja Muhammad Safdar Medical College

Autor: Muhammad Yasir Sohban, Ubaid-ur-Rehman and Junaid Maqbool
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2018
Předmět:
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1313776
Popis: Introduction: Stress is the body’s reaction towards changes that require physical, mental and physiological adjustment. When it sustains for longer periods of time, leads to have detrimental effects on the physical and mental well-being of the individual. Globally presence of stress is highly variable with a prevalence rate of 52.4% - 79% and around 79% in Pakistan. Medical studies have always been stressful and demanding. This increased academic demand along with inter-personal relationships and financial problems have been associated with highly stressed states among medical students which ultimately leads to adverse effects on mental health and causes impaired cognitive functioning of medical students.Objectives: The objectives were to find out prevalence of stress and its severity among medical college students and to identify the factors related to it.Methodology: A descriptive cross sectional questionnaire based study was conducted in period from 1st May to 1st June 2017 in Khawaja Muhammad Safdar Medical College,Pakistan. 220 students were selected randomly and data was collected on Kessler (k10) questionnaire covering all variables. Data was entered and analyze on SPSS 20.0. Qualitative variables like stress frequency and percentages were used and quantitative variables like age were expressed in mean and standard deviation. Chi-square tests were used as a test of association. P-value ≤ 0.05 was taken as significant.Result: Mean age of students was 21 years ± 1.749SD, median being 21 years. 103(46.8%) were males and 117(53.2%) were females. Overall prevalence of stress was 176/220(80%). Socio-demographic profile included 49(90.7%) below age 20yrs, 127(76.5%) ≥ 20yrs had stress. Out of 176/220(80%) stressed students, 98(83.8%) were females and 78(75.7%) were males. 37(94.9%) day scholars and 13(76.8%) were hostellites who were having stress. 89(100%) had income
Databáze: OpenAIRE