“Medical student syndrome”: a real disease or just a myth?—a cross-sectional study at Menoufia University, Egypt

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Abstract

Background: A widely held belief is that “Medical student syndrome” is frequently experienced by young medical students, that is, they experience the symptoms of the diseases they are studying or fear of having such illness. A hypothesis is that because medical students constantly learn about life-threatening conditions and diseases, they experience persistent fear and stress regarding having a severe medical condition, an anxiety-related illness called nosophobia. Results: Although medical students scored an average of 14.14 on a scale measuring potential nosophobia a, the difference between their scores and those of non-medical students, who scored an average of 0.11, is significantly higher (p 0.001). According to the presented analysis, non-medical and medical students exhibit distinct levels of nosophobia. The analysis of responses to hypochondriacal behaviors revealed that students from non-medical faculties scored an average of 1.43 points. By contrast, the average score for medical students was 7.87, which is significantly higher than that of the non-medical students (p 0.001). Conclusions: Medical students are at higher risk for health anxiety and hypochondrial attitudes than non-medical students are.

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Sherif, H. A., Tawfeeq, K., Mohamed, Z., Abdelhakeem, L., Tahoon, S. H., Mosa, M., … Elnoamany, S. (2023). “Medical student syndrome”: a real disease or just a myth?—a cross-sectional study at Menoufia University, Egypt. Middle East Current Psychiatry, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s43045-023-00312-6

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