Document details

Exploring the impact of depression, anxiety, stress, academic engagement, and dropout intention on medical students' academic performance: A prospective study

Author(s): Sinval, J. ; Oliveira, P. ; Novais, F. ; Almeida, C. M. ; Telles-Correia, D.

Date: 2025

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/32480

Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Subject(s): Depression; Anxiety; Stress; Academic engagement; Dropout intentions; Academic performance; Medical students


Description

Background Depression, anxiety, and stress (DAS) have been linked to poor academic outcomes. This study explores the relationships among DAS, academic engagement, dropout intentions, and academic performance — measured by Grade Point Average (GPA) — in medical students. It aims to understand how these factors relate to each other and predict academic performance. Methods Data were collected from 351 medical students (74.9 % female) through an online survey. The average age was 20.2 years. Psychometric instruments measured DAS, academic engagement, and dropout intentions. Structural equation modeling was used to test the relationships between these variables and their prediction of GPA. Results DAS negatively associated academic engagement (?=-0.501; p<0.001) and positively connected to dropout intentions (?=0.340; p<0.001). Academic engagement positively predicted GPA (?=0.298; p<0.001) and negatively associated with dropout intentions (?=-0.367; p<0.001). DAS had a nonsignificant direct effect on GPA (?=-0.008; p=0.912). However, DAS indirect effect — via academic engagement — on GPA and dropout intention was statistically significant. Limitations The study’s limitations include the use of a convenience sample and the collection of all variables — except GPA — at the same time point, which may affect the generalizability of the results. Conclusions The study supports the important role of DAS in associating with academic engagement and dropout intentions, which can predict GPA. Addressing DAS could enhance academic engagement and reduce dropout rates, leading to better academic performance.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
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