Chinese Journal of Medical Education ›› 2026, Vol. 46 ›› Issue (7): 490-495.DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.cn115259-20250903-01060

• Education of Morals and Medical Ethics • Previous Articles     Next Articles

A study on the differential driving effects of medical students' subjective well-being and situational well-being in ideological and political education on their satisfaction with ideological and political education

Bai Yang1, Jing Zhengwei2, Li Qingliang1, Liu Jing1, He Xiaolu1   

  1. 1Office of the Party Committee and the President, Peking University Sixth Hospital, Beijing 100191, China;
    2Department of Social Medicine and Health Services Management, School of Public Health, Hangzhou Medical College, Hangzhou 311300, China
  • Received:2025-09-03 Online:2026-07-01 Published:2026-07-01
  • Contact: He Xiaolu, Email: angelhlu@163.com
  • Supported by:
    Key Bidding Project for Student Work Research at Peking University Health Science Center(BYXG230108); 2022 Education and Teaching Research Project of Peking University Health Science Center(2022ZD03)

Abstract: Objective To investigate the differentiated driving effects of medical students' subjective well-being and situational well-being in ideological and political education on their satisfaction with ideological and political education. Methods From March to June 2025, a convenience sampling method was used to select 226 full-time students from a medical university as participants. The PERMA-Profiler scale was used to measure their subjective well-being. A self-developed ″Situational Well-being in Ideological and Political Education Questionnaire″ was used to measure their situational well-being in ideological and political education. A single item (0-10) was used to assess their satisfaction with ideological and political education. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to examine the structural validity of the Situational Well-being Questionnaire. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were used to compare the scores with theoretical median values. Multiple linear regression analysis was conducted to examine the effects of the two types of well-being on satisfaction. Results For the situational well-being questionnaire, Cronbach's α coefficients for all dimensions were ≥0.90, composite reliability (CR) values were ≥0.90, and average variance extracted (AVE) values were ≥0.74. The model fit was acceptable (χ2/df=2.34, CFI=0.97, RMSEA=0.08). The median scores for the dimensions of subjective well-being among medical students ranged from 7.67 to 8.33. The median scores for the dimensions of situational well-being in ideological and political education ranged from 4.00 to 4.33. All scores were significantly higher than the respective theoretical median values (5 and 3, all P<0.001). No statistically significant differences were found in either type of well-being by gender or educational level (all P>0.05). Multiple linear regression analysis showed that both situational well-being in ideological and political education (β=0.41, P<0.001) and subjective well-being (β=0.23, P=0.002) positively influenced medical students' satisfaction with ideological and political education, with the former having a significantly stronger effect than the latter. Conclusions Medical students' subjective well-being and their situational well-being in ideological and political education are both relatively high. Both types of well-being positively influence satisfaction with ideological and political education, but the driving effect of situational well-being in ideological and political education is considerably stronger than that of subjective well-being. This suggests that enhancing students' immediate positive psychological experiences within the context of ideological and political education is a key practical focus for improving satisfaction with ideological and political education.

Key words: Students, medical, Satisfaction with ideological and political education, Situational well-being in ideological and political education, Subjective well-being, PERMA theory

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