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Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered several challenges to mental health worldwide. Undergraduate medical students face considerable stress in their academic routines. Thus, there is a need to explore the implications of the mental health of undergraduate medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Objective: To review the global literature about anxiety and depression disorders in undergraduate medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: we developed an integrative literature review on the occurrence of anxiety and depression symptoms in undergraduate medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic. We assessed the results on the occurrence of anxiety and depression and the severity of symptoms in medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic using quantitative studies applying the GAD-7 questionnaire for anxiety or PHQ-9 for depression. Results: We reviewed 85 selected studies, and the results showed a significant prevalence of moderate and severe symptoms of anxiety and depression, with 28.2% of participants presenting scores ≥ 10 on the GAD-7 and 38.9% on the PHQ-9. Statistical analyses revealed associations between higher rates of anxiety symptoms in developing countries and data collected after the lockdown period in 2020, at the Pandemic lockdown. Conclusion: Our findings highlight the need for specific interventions to support the mental health of undergraduate medical students, critically in female students from developing countries during a Pandemic crisis.
Filho et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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