AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the high rates of burnout and depression among Chinese neurology graduate students, highlighting the urgent need for targeted health services.
  • The research found that 32.2% of students displayed overlapping symptoms, with factors like marital status and career regret influencing burnout, while overlapping symptoms were linked to broader issues like family income and dropout considerations.
  • The results underscore that burnout and depression are interconnected, calling for a better understanding of how they impact students' mental health.

Article Abstract

Background: The overlap of burnout and depression is a phenomenon that can effectively reflect the psychological state of a group. However, whether burnout is a type of depression is still debated in current research. The high incidence of burnout and depressive symptoms among medical students indicates that it is urgent to provide appropriate health services for them. However, the proportion of burnout and depression in the overlapping symptoms experienced by medical students, and the characteristics of the relative influencing factors, remain unclear. Therefore, we addressed these issues for neurology graduate students in China.

Methods: Using data from a cross-sectional survey of Chinese neurology graduate students, a diagnostic model was established according to their burnout and/or depression symptoms. Burnout was assessed by using the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Depression symptoms were assessed with a two-item depression screening tool for primary care evaluation of mental disorders. Univariate analyses with chi-squared tests were conducted to assess associations between variables. Multinomial logistic regression models were used to analyze the effects of multiple factors on dependent variables. The factors included demographic information and three medical-study related problems.

Results: In total, 32.2% of surveyed students evidenced overlapping burnout and depression symptoms. Students with depressive symptoms tended to be included in the burnout students' category. In the regression model, being unmarried, having children, and career choice regret were related to students who had only burnout, while the students with overlapping symptoms were affected by more factors such as family income, the consideration of dropping out once.

Conclusions: The symptoms and related factors of burnout and depression among Chinese neurology postgraduates have obvious overlap and show a significant trend. The occurrence of depressive symptoms among medical students is closely related to whether they are burned out. Students with only burnout were common, but students with only depressive symptoms were uncommon. Finally, burnout may be a pre-depression state.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7851928PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02511-3DOI Listing

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