Correlation of life events with depression, anxiety and somatic symptoms in graduate students: a study based on network analysis
10.11886/scjsws20241010003
- VernacularTitle:研究生生活事件与抑郁、焦虑和躯体症状的相互关系模式:基于网络分析的研究
- Author:
Weili DENG
1
;
Jia CAI
1
;
Qiuyue LYV
1
;
Qianshu MA
1
;
Yupeng LUO
1
;
Min XIE
1
;
Qiang WANG
1
Author Information
1. Sichuan University, West China Hospital, Mental Health Center, Chengdu 610041, China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Life events;
Mental health;
Graduate students;
Network analysis
- From:
Sichuan Mental Health
2025;38(4):364-373
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
BackgroundGraduate students frequently face life events, many of which may adversely affect their mental well-being. However, the interaction between life events and the development of depression, anxiety, and somatic symptoms remains unclear. ObjectiveTo explore the relationship between life events and the development of depressive, anxiety and somatic symptoms in graduate students, thereby informing prevention strategies for these conditions. MethodsA sample of 6 722 newly enrolled graduate students at a comprehensive university in Southwest China from September to November 2018 was selected. The assessment was conducted using the Adolescent Self-rating Life Events Checklist (ASLEC), the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale-7 item (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Scale-9 item (PHQ-9), and the Patient Health Questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15). Network analysis was implemented by using the bootnet and qgraph packages in the R software (version 4.2.3), with centrality indices calculated to identify core and bridge symptoms within the network. ResultsThe study encompassed a total of 6 171 graduate students, representing 91.80% of the target population. The prevalence rates of anxiety, depressive, and somatic symptoms among graduate students were 12.59% (777/6 171), 16.63% (1 026/6 171), and 27.66% (1 707/6 171), respectively. Network analysis revealed that 'academic stress' was the core symptom with the highest strength and expected influence (both values=1.207), while 'feeling down, depressed, or hopeless' was the bridge symptom with the highest bridge strength and bridge expected influence (both values=0.454). There was no significant difference in global network strength and edge weight between women and men (P>0.05). ConclusionAcademic stress, emerging as the core symptom, assumes a dominant position within the symptom network and exhibits strong interactions with other negative affective states. There was no gender difference in the network structure.