Factors associated with stress among emergency medicine residents
A survey of members of the Emergency Medicine Residents Association was conducted to investigate the occupational stress and depression experienced by this group. The 488 respondents provided demographic information and completed measures of stress and depression. Multivariate analysis of variance revealed statistically significant differences in stress and depression by year of training (P < .001), gender (P < .01), and marital status (P < .01). Univariate analyses of variance revealed overall differences in both stress and depression. Mean levels of stress and depression were higher for women residents, and unmarried residents reported more depressive symptomatology. The results indicate that women emergency medicine residents experience more stress and depression than men and that spouses can buffer some of the stress of residency training for men and women residents. No significant differences in stress or depression by year in training were revealed by univariate analysis of variance, which suggests that residents experience stress throughout the course of training. The similarities and differences in the occupational stress and depression experienced by emergency medicine residents in comparison with residents from other specialties suggest that additional study in emergency medicine is warranted.
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*Department of Emergency Medicine, East Carolina University School of Medicine, Greenville, North Carolina, USA
†American College of Emergency Physicians, Dallas, Texas, USA
‡Battelle Human Affairs Research Centers, Washington, DC, USA
Address for reprints: Theodore W Whitley, PhD, Department of Emergency Medicine, East Carolina School of Medicine, Brody 4W54, Greenville, NC 27858-4354.
Supported in part by the American College of Emergency Physicians.
Presented at the Second International Conference on Emergency Medicine, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, October 1988.