Sleep Science (Dec 2022)

COVID-19 pandemic decreased sleep quality of medical students

  • Ana Clara Aragão Fernandes,
  • Deborah de Melo Magalhães Padilha,
  • Anaís Concepción Marinho Andrade de Moura,
  • Carlos Eduardo França de Aquino,
  • Irinna Bruna de Araújo Lima,
  • Sergio Arthuro Mota-Rolim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5935/1984-0063.20220075
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 04
pp. 436 – 440

Abstract

Read online

Objective: Medical students are especially vulnerable to situations of poor sleep quality due to academic demands. The COVID-19 pandemic brought significant changes and high psychological stress, causing a great impact on this population. Here we aim to analyze the influence of the pandemic on the sleep quality of medical students. Methods: Cross-sectional, observational, and descriptive study with a quantitative approach carried out with students from medical universities in Rio Grande do Norte state (Brazil) through the online application of two questionnaires: Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI-BR) and sociodemographic questionnaire (SQ). Results: A total of 142 medical students participated in this study: 103 women and 39 men. We observed a prevalence of low sleep quality in 78.16% of the sample and that the pandemic significantly affected the sleep quality among medical students (p0.05). Discussion: This rate of poor sleep quality is higher than the prevalence of periods before the pandemic (58%). Concerns about COVID-19’s negative impact on medical education, delayed training, and impact on the generation of medical jobs can directly aggravate the sleep quality. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic negatively influenced the sleep quality of medical students, increasing the prevalence of poor sleep quality and promoting changes in the sleep pattern.

Keywords