Depression is a widespread condition, which increased during the COVID-19 pandemic among healthcare workers as well. The large workload of the pandemic response also affected Public Health Residents (PHRs) who played an important role in infection prevention and control activities. This work aims to assess depression in Italian PHRs, based on data collected through the PHRASI (Public Health Residents' Anonymous Survey in Italy) study. In 2022, 379 PHRs completed the self-administered questionnaire containing Patient Health Questionnaire-9 to evaluate clinically relevant depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥ 10). Multivariate logistic regression shows that the intention (aOR = 3.925, 95% CI = (2.067-7.452)) and the uncertainty (aOR = 4.949, 95% CI = (1.872-13.086)) of repeating the test to enter another postgraduate school/general practitioner course and the simultaneous attendance of two traineeships (aOR = 1.832, 95% CI = (1.010-3.324)) are positively related with depressive symptoms. Conversely, the willingness to work in the current traineeship place (aOR = 0.456, 95% CI = (0.283-0.734)) emerged as a protective factor. Similar results were obtained considering mild-to-severe (PHQ-9 ≥ 5) depressive symptoms and/or stratifying by sex. The findings, suggesting the protective role of job satisfaction toward depression, might entail future interventions to improve the learning experience and promote work-life balance.

Depressive Symptoms of Public Health Medical Residents during the COVID-19 Pandemic, a Nation-Wide Survey: The PHRASI Study / F. Cedrone, N. Berselli, L. Stacchini, V. De Nicolò, M. Caminiti, A. Ancona, G. Minutolo, C. Mazza, C. Cosma, V. Gallinoro, A. Catalini, V. Gianfredi. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH. - ISSN 1660-4601. - 20:9(2023 May), pp. 5620.1-5620.18. [10.3390/ijerph20095620]

Depressive Symptoms of Public Health Medical Residents during the COVID-19 Pandemic, a Nation-Wide Survey: The PHRASI Study

V. Gianfredi
Writing – Review & Editing
2023

Abstract

Depression is a widespread condition, which increased during the COVID-19 pandemic among healthcare workers as well. The large workload of the pandemic response also affected Public Health Residents (PHRs) who played an important role in infection prevention and control activities. This work aims to assess depression in Italian PHRs, based on data collected through the PHRASI (Public Health Residents' Anonymous Survey in Italy) study. In 2022, 379 PHRs completed the self-administered questionnaire containing Patient Health Questionnaire-9 to evaluate clinically relevant depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥ 10). Multivariate logistic regression shows that the intention (aOR = 3.925, 95% CI = (2.067-7.452)) and the uncertainty (aOR = 4.949, 95% CI = (1.872-13.086)) of repeating the test to enter another postgraduate school/general practitioner course and the simultaneous attendance of two traineeships (aOR = 1.832, 95% CI = (1.010-3.324)) are positively related with depressive symptoms. Conversely, the willingness to work in the current traineeship place (aOR = 0.456, 95% CI = (0.283-0.734)) emerged as a protective factor. Similar results were obtained considering mild-to-severe (PHQ-9 ≥ 5) depressive symptoms and/or stratifying by sex. The findings, suggesting the protective role of job satisfaction toward depression, might entail future interventions to improve the learning experience and promote work-life balance.
No
English
Patient Health Questionnaire; cross-sectional design; depression; healthcare personnel; job satisfaction; mental health; public health; schools;
Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale e Applicata
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 3: Good health and well-being
mag-2023
24-apr-2023
MDPI
20
9
5620
1
18
18
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Depressive Symptoms of Public Health Medical Residents during the COVID-19 Pandemic, a Nation-Wide Survey: The PHRASI Study / F. Cedrone, N. Berselli, L. Stacchini, V. De Nicolò, M. Caminiti, A. Ancona, G. Minutolo, C. Mazza, C. Cosma, V. Gallinoro, A. Catalini, V. Gianfredi. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH. - ISSN 1660-4601. - 20:9(2023 May), pp. 5620.1-5620.18. [10.3390/ijerph20095620]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
12
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
F. Cedrone, N. Berselli, L. Stacchini, V. De Nicolò, M. Caminiti, A. Ancona, G. Minutolo, C. Mazza, C. Cosma, V. Gallinoro, A. Catalini, V. Gianfredi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/971238
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