Prevalence of stress in Casablanca medical students: a cross-sectional study

Recently, an important literature data has reported that medical students experience stress more than students in other disciplines. In contrast, there is a significant shortage of the stress impact on the academic performance. The primary purpose of our study was to determine the prevalence of stre...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Pan African medical journal 2014, Vol.19 (149), p.149-149
Hauptverfasser: Ben Loubir, Dalal, Serhier, Zeineb, Diouny, Samir, Battas, Omar, Agoub, Mohamed, Bennani Othmani, Mohammed
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recently, an important literature data has reported that medical students experience stress more than students in other disciplines. In contrast, there is a significant shortage of the stress impact on the academic performance. The primary purpose of our study was to determine the prevalence of stress among Casablanca Medical students and to investigate if there is an association between stress and academic skills. A total of 275 participants studying at Casablanca Medical School were included. The study was conducted using a self-administered, anonymous questionnaire, which included four subscales on academic skills perception (Academic competence, Test competence, Time management and Strategic study habits) and a Test Anxiety scale to assess the degree of stress related to exams among medical students. The overall findings showed that 52.7% of respondents were stressed by examinations, and the highest stress prevalence was among the fifth-year medical students. Measures of comparative stress degrees between male and female students did not show any statistical significant differences (p=0.34). Correlation analysis revealed negative association between stress and academic competence (-0.394), test competence (-0.426), time management (-0.240), strategic study (-0.183) respectively (p
ISSN:1937-8688
1937-8688
DOI:10.11604/pamj.2014.19.149.4010