Who is a tired student? Fatigue and its predictors from a gender perspective.

Authors

  • Agata Zdun-Ryżewska Medical University of Gdansk, Poland
  • Natalia Nadrowska Medical University of Gdansk, Poland
  • Krzysztof Basiński Medical University of Gdansk, Poland
  • Maciej Walkiewicz Medical University of Gdansk, Poland
  • Magdalena Błażek Medical University of Gdansk, Poland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53761/1.18.6.10

Keywords:

Fatigue, exhaustion, burnout, gender, students

Abstract

The level of fatigue among medical students is increasing. Exhaustion is an essential symptom of burnout, which may occur even while a student. Our exploratory study sought to identify the characteristics of tired students and to describe factors determining fatigue among medical students. The studied group consisted of second-year medical students (N=193) from a Polish medical university. Statistically significant differences in fatigue appeared between male and female students. We obtained positive correlations between intensity of fatigue and sleepiness, pain intensity, stress, anxiety, depression and negative health conditions, life satisfaction, emotional stability, conscientiousness, and self-efficacy. Predictors relevant for female fatigue were sleepiness, health condition, depression, and conscientiousness (the whole model explains 46% of variance in fatigue). Predictors relevant for male fatigue were sleepiness, health condition, anxiety, and agreeableness (the whole model explains 55% of variance in fatigue). We did not observe differences in fatigue between sleepless, overloaded, or stressed people. Explaining the differences between male and female predictors and levels of fatigue in terms of personality traits through the prism of defined stereotypical social roles is worth considering.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2021-05-03

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Who is a tired student? Fatigue and its predictors from a gender perspective. (2021). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 18(6), 139-154. https://doi.org/10.53761/1.18.6.10