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A Cross-Sectional Study on Barriers to Mental Health Help-Seeking Among Egyptian Medical Students

B

Benha University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mental Health Conditions

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06839365
RC 5-3-2022

Details and patient eligibility

About

High levels of mental distress were reported among medical students; however, only a small portion decided to seek help. This study aims to identify the most diagnosed mental disorders among medical students in Egypt, recognising their family attitudes and the major barriers that deter them from seeking help. This is a cross-sectional study conducted on Egyptian medical students.

Full description

Study design A multicenter cross-sectional study across Egypt was conducted among Egyptian medical students via different social media platforms of the Egyptian faculties of medicine.

Study population Data collection Young adult medical students aged 18 to 25 in the different Egyptian faculties of medicine and from different medical class years were eligible to participate. During the recruitment of the participants, we used convenience and snowball sampling techniques. The online survey and data collection took place from April to June 2022.

Sample Size Calculation The sample size was calculated using the equation (n = [Z2 × P (1-P)] ÷ e2) [14] Under a 95% Confidence level (Z=1.96), 50% response distribution (P=0.5) and confidence interval (e=3), a sample of 1067 participants were required.

Measurements The participants were presented with an online and self-administered questionnaire including 27-item barriers mentioned in the 30-item Barriers to Access to Care Evaluation (BACE) scale [15]. Each questionnaire consisted of 4 sections: the first was assessing the sociodemographic characteristics of the participants. The second was assessing the presence of previously diagnosed mental disorders. The third was the 27-item BACE survey including 9 items for the stigma, 10 for the altitudinal barriers, 6 for instrumental barriers, and 2 work-related items preceded by a question if the student works or not; the 2 items of work were reallocated from the stigma and instrumental sections, based on the assumption that only small portion of the medical students has an occupation. The last segment was family-related yes-or-no questions assessing the family attitude towards mental health (by asking if they know mental health's importance if they recognize it as important as physical health and their support in the presence of mental health problems) and the presence or absence of previous familial suicidal attempts.

Data analysis Data were analysed using SPSS version 25. The internal consistency of the survey was determined using Cronbach's α. The internal consistency of the overall 27-item scale (stigma, attitudinal, instrumental, and working-beside-education barriers) was of good reliability (α = 0.904). We used the frequency and percentage to summarise the categorical data but mean and standard division to summarise the total effect of each domain. The Chi-square test, Fisher's exact test, and odds ratio (OR) were carried out on categorical data. The three-point Likert scale was used to determine whether the barrier is considered not a barrier, a minor barrier, or a major barrier using Likert intervals (0, 0.67, 1.34, 2). A P-value of ≤ 0.05 is considered significant.

Enrollment

1,037 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 25 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Young adult medical students aged 18 to 25 in the different Egyptian faculties of medicine and from different medical class years were eligible to participate

Exclusion criteria

not Young adult medical students aged 18 to 25 in the different Egyptian faculties of medicine and from different medical class years were eligible to participate

Trial design

1,037 participants in 1 patient group

Egyptian medical students
Description:
Young adult medical students aged 18 to 25 in the different Egyptian faculties of medicine and from different medical class years were eligible to participate. During the recruitment of the participants, we used convenience and snowball sampling techniques.

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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