Prevalence and Severity of Somatic Symptom Disorder among Medical Students in Pakistan

Authors

  • Dr. Ghulam Murtaza
  • Dr. Maria Mustafa
  • Dr. Daud Arshad
  • Dr Saifullah Tayyab
  • Dr Hasan Shafiq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47941/ijhmnp.1360
Abstract views: 202
PDF downloads: 90

Keywords:

Somatoform disorder, Somatization, PHQ-15, Medical Student disease, Medical Studentitis, Physical Symptoms

Abstract

Purpose: Medical students face heightened risks of developing somatic symptom disorder due to the high levels of stress associated with their academic curriculum and clinical rotations. Somatic symptom disorder is characterized by persistent physical symptoms without a discernible medical explanation, leading to impaired daily functioning, reduced quality of life, and increased healthcare utilization. Given the limited research on somatic symptom disorder among medical students in Pakistan, this study aims to assess the prevalence and severity of somatic symptom disorder among medical students at the Islamic International Medical College in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. The assessment will utilize the Patient Health Questionnaire Physical Symptoms (PHQ-15) as a measurement tool.

Methodology: A convenience sampling study was conducted among 500 medical students, with 220 respondents completing the PHQ-15. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data.

Findings: The prevalence of somatic symptom disorder among medical students was found to be 44.5%, with a significantly higher prevalence among females (53.96%) compared to males (31.89%). The severity level of somatic symptom disorder was classified as minimal in 17.3%, low in 38.2%, medium in 28.6%, and high in 15.9% of cases among medical students.

Unique Contribution to Theory, Policy and Practice: This study highlights a high prevalence of somatic symptom disorder among medical students in Pakistan, particularly among females. Findings suggest the need for targeted interventions such as stress management programs, mental health services, and changes to the medical education curriculum to promote student well-being. Further research is needed to explore the causes and consequences of somatic symptom disorder in this population.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Witthöft M, Hiller W. Psychological approaches to origins and treatments of somatoform disorders.

Mohan Isaac, Aleksandar Janca & John Orley, CMAJ.Somatization - a culture-bound or universal syndrome?

Roger C. Imagined illnesses can cause real problems for medical students.

Somatic complain of Nigerian by prof. Petero Ebigbo

Rona Moss-Morris Keith J Petrie, Redefining medical students’ disease to reduce morbidity.

Gulewitsch MD, Enck P, Hautzinger M, Schlarb AA. Irritable bowel syndrome symptoms among German students: prevalence, characteristics, and associations to somatic complaints, sleep, quality of life, and childhood abdominal pain. Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol.

Dr Sharad Manore, Dr Kamal Sahare, Dr Dhiraj Bhawnani, Laxmikant Umate, Prevalence of Illness Anxiety Disorder (IAD) and Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD) among Medical and non Medical Students

Hiske van Ravesteijn MD, Karin Wittkampf MD, Peter Lucassen MD, PhD, Eloy van de Lisdonk MD, PhD, Henk van den Hoogen MSc, Henk van Weert MD, PhD, Jochanan Huijser- MD, PhD, Aart Schene MD, PhD, Chris van Weel MD, PhD, and Anne Speckens MD, PhD, Detecting Somatoform Disorders in Primary Care With the PHQ-15

J.M. Chinawa, Ada R.C. Nwokocha, Pius C. Manyike, A. T. Chinawa, Elias C. Aniwada, A. Chidi N, Psychosomatic problems among medical students: a myth or reality.

Rona Moss-Morris Keith J Petrie, Redefining medical students’ disease to reduce morbidity

Joel E. Dimsdale, Francis Creed , Javier Escobar, Michael Sharpe, Lawson Wulsin, Arthur Barsky, Sing Lee, Michael R. Irwin, James Levenson, Somatic Symptom Disorder: An important change in DSM

Hinton H, kirk S. Families and healthcare professionals’ perceptions of healthcare services for children and young people with medically unexplained symptoms.

Spitzer RL, Kroenke K, Williams JB, et al. (10 November 1999). "Validation and utility of a self-report version of PRIME-MD: the PHQ primary care study". JAMA. 14.www.phqscreeners.com

MedInfo Letter No 5896480 by Pfizer, Pfizer Medical Information

Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JB: The PHQ-15: validity of a new measure for evaluating the severity of somatic symptoms.

Somatoform disorder: symptoms types and treatment.

Susanne F, Jens G, Ulrike E, Urs MN. Prevalence, overlap, and predictors of functional somatic syndromes in a student sample. Int J Behav Med. 2013

Firth J. Levels and sources of stress in medical students. Br Med J Clin Res Ed. 1986

Unruh AM. Gender variations in clinical pain experience.

Piccinelli M, Simon G. Gender and cross-cultural differences in somatic symptoms associated with emotional distress.

Neitzert CS, Davis C, Kennedy SH. Personality factors related to the prevalence of somatic symptoms and medical complaints in a healthy student population. Br J Med Psychology

Cunningham LS, Kelsey JL. Epidemiology of musculoskeletal impairments and associated disability. Am J Public Health.

Feine JS, Bushnell MC, Miron D, Duncan GH. Sex differences in the perception of oxious heat stimuli.

Kroenke K, Spitzer RL. Gender differences in the reporting of physical and somatoform symptoms.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-23

How to Cite

Murtaza, G. ., Mustafa, M., Arshad, D. ., Tayyab, S. ., & Shafiq, H. . (2023). Prevalence and Severity of Somatic Symptom Disorder among Medical Students in Pakistan. International Journal of Health, Medicine and Nursing Practice, 5(3), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.47941/ijhmnp.1360

Issue

Section

Articles