Dahili ve Cerrahi Branş Araştırma Görevlilerinin Anksiyete Düzeyleri ile Uyku Kalitesi Arasındaki İlişkinin Değerlendirilmesi

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Date
2025Author
Seyitoğlu, Furkan
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Sleep is a fundamental component of health, and its timing, duration, and quality are
critical determinants of the effect of sleep on health. Healthy sleep is affected by
many personal and environmental factors. There is widespread agreement that there
is a positive relationship between sleep quality and anxiety. Physicians, especially
those undergoing specialization training, have to cope with stress, anxiety caused by
stress, and sleep deprivation, which have negative effects on their education and
clinical performance. Sleep quality and anxiety levels are important for both the
health of the employee and the health of the society and its effects on the health
system. The aim of our study is to investigate the relationship between anxiety levels
and sleep quality among research assistants working in university hospitals or
training and research hospitals in Turkey. This study is a descriptive survey study. A
total of 400 research assistant physicians, 240 of whom are internal sciences and 160
of whom are surgical sciences, were included in our study between 19.04.2023 and
19.10.2023 in Turkey. The prepared sociodemographic data form, Beck Anxiety
Inventory (BAI) and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) were applied to research
assistant physicians via Google survey. The BAI score mean was 17.74±11.99 and it
was determined that the participants had moderate anxiety. It was found that the BAI
score of the participants in the surgical sciences branch was higher (p<0.001). A
statistically significant relationship was found between smoking and alcohol, years of
work in assistantship, and having received specialization training in another branch
before and the BAI scores (p=0.001, p=0.004, p<0.001, p<0.001, respectively). The
PSQI score mean was 7.74±2.95 and it was determined that 84.8% of the participants
had poor sleep quality. It was found that the PSQI score of the participants in the
surgical sciences branch was higher (p<0.001). There was a statistically significant
relationship between gender, marital status, living alone, smoking, years of work in
residency, and having received specialization training in another branch before and
PSQI scores (p<0.001, p=0.010, p=0.043, p<0.001, p=0.007, p=0.010, respectively).
A positive and moderate statistically significant relationship was found between the
participants' total BAI score and the total PSQI score (r=0.520, p<0.001). Sleep
quality and anxiety level are important in terms of both the health of the employee
and the health of the society and their effects on the health system. Therefore, we
believe that more work and effort is needed to correct the negative factors related to
this issue in order to provide a higher quality education and health service, and that
more care should be taken in the surgical department research assistants.