Ravi J. Matthai Centre for Educational Innovation, India Institute of Management Ahmedabad, KLMDC# 36, Old Campus, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, 380 015, India.
South Texas Medical Scientist Training Program, University of Texas Health San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, 78229, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Apr 30;22(1):333. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03396-6.
Acceptance into U.S. MD-PhD dual-degree programs is highly competitive, and the lengthy training program requires transitioning between multiple phases (pre-clinical-, PhD-research-, and clinical-training phases), which can be stressful. Challenges faced during MD-PhD training could exacerbate self-doubt and anxiety. Impostor phenomenon is the experience of feeling like a fraud, with some high-achieving, competent individuals attributing their successes to luck or other factors rather than their own ability and hard work. To our knowledge, impostor phenomenon among MD-PhD trainees has not been described. This study examined impostor phenomenon experiences during MD-PhD training and reasons trainees attributed to these feelings.
Individuals in science and medicine fields participated in an online survey that included the 20-item Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale (CIPS); higher scores (range 20-100) indicate more frequent impostor phenomenon. Some respondents who reported experiencing impostor phenomenon also voluntarily completed a semi-structured interview, sharing experiences during training that contributed to feelings of impostor phenomenon. Interview transcripts were coded and analysed using the constant comparative method and analytic induction to identify themes.
Of 959 survey respondents (students and professionals in science and medicine), 13 MD-PhD students and residents completed the survey, nine of whom (five male, four female; four white, five other race-ethnicity) also completed an interview. These participants experienced moderate-to-intense scores on the CIPS (range: 46-96). Four themes emerged from the interview narratives that described participants' experiences of IP: professional identity formation, fear of evaluation, minority status, and, program-transition experiences. All reported struggling to develop a physician-scientist identity and lacking a sense of belonging in medicine or research.
Impostor experiences that MD-PhD participants attributed to bias and micro-aggressions in social interactions with peers, faculty, and patients challenged their professional identity formation as physician-scientists. It is important to further examine how MD-PhD-program structures, cultures, and social interactions can lead to feelings of alienation and experiences of impostor phenomenon, particularly for students from diverse and underrepresented populations in medicine.
进入美国医学博士-哲学博士双学位项目的竞争非常激烈,而且漫长的培训项目需要在多个阶段(临床前阶段、博士研究阶段和临床培训阶段)之间过渡,这可能会带来压力。在医学博士-哲学博士培训期间面临的挑战可能会加剧自我怀疑和焦虑。冒名顶替者现象是一种感到自己是骗子的体验,一些高成就、有能力的人将自己的成功归因于运气或其他因素,而不是自己的能力和努力。据我们所知,医学博士-哲学博士学员中还没有描述过冒名顶替者现象。本研究探讨了医学博士-哲学博士培训期间的冒名顶替者现象体验,以及学员归因于这些感觉的原因。
科学和医学领域的个人参加了一项在线调查,其中包括 20 项 Clance 冒名顶替者现象量表(CIPS);得分越高(范围 20-100)表示冒名顶替者现象越频繁。一些报告经历过冒名顶替者现象的受访者还自愿完成了半结构化访谈,分享了在培训期间导致冒名顶替者现象的经历。访谈记录采用恒定性比较法和分析归纳法进行编码和分析,以确定主题。
在 959 名调查受访者(科学和医学领域的学生和专业人士)中,有 13 名医学博士-哲学博士学生和住院医师完成了调查,其中 9 人(5 男 4 女;4 白 5 其他种族-族裔)还完成了访谈。这些参与者在 CIPS 上的得分处于中度到高强度(范围:46-96)。从访谈叙述中出现了四个主题,描述了参与者的冒名顶替者现象体验:专业身份形成、对评估的恐惧、少数群体地位和项目过渡经历。所有人都报告说,他们在发展医生-科学家身份方面遇到了困难,并且在医学或研究中缺乏归属感。
医学博士-哲学博士参与者归因于与同龄人、教师和患者在社交互动中存在偏见和微侵犯的冒名顶替者经历,挑战了他们作为医生-科学家的专业身份形成。进一步研究医学博士-哲学博士项目结构、文化和社交互动如何导致疏远感和冒名顶替者现象体验非常重要,特别是对于来自医学领域多元化和代表性不足的人群的学生。