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Tracking Stress, Mental Health, and Resilience Factors in Medical Students Before, During, and After a Stress-Inducing Exam Period: Protocol and Proof-of-Principle Analyses for the RESIST Cohort Study.

Jessica FritzJan StochlRogier Andrew KievitAnne-Laura van HarmelenPaul Oliver Wilkinson
Published in: JMIR formative research (2021)
As expected, the exam period caused a temporary increase in perceived stress and mental distress. Therefore, the RESIST study lends itself well to exploring resilience factors in response to naturally occurring exam stress. Such knowledge will eventually help researchers to find out which resilience factors lend themselves best as prevention targets and which lend themselves best as treatment targets for the mitigation of mental health problems that are triggered or accelerated by natural exam stress. The findings from the RESIST study may therefore inform student support services, mental health services, and resilience theory.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • climate change
  • social support
  • healthcare
  • medical students
  • mental illness
  • depressive symptoms