University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA.
Family & Community Medicine, University of New Mexico, PhD University of New Mexico School of Medicine, 1 UNM, Albuquerque, NM, MSC09-5040, 87131, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Apr 5;23(1):214. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04203-6.
Shortly after the World Health Organization declared the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak a worldwide pandemic, medical school governing bodies issued guidance recommending pausing clinical rotations. Prior to the availability of COVD-19 vaccines, many schools implemented exclusively online curriculums in the didactic and clinical years. These unprecedented events and paradigm changes in medical education could contribute to trainee burnout, wellness, and mental health.
This single-institution study interviewed first, second, and third-year medical students from a medical school in the southwestern United States. A semi-structured interview was conducted with paper-based Likert scale questions rating perceived happiness were administered both at the time of the interview and one year later in order to understand how their student experience and happiness were impacted. In addition, we asked participants to describe any major life events they experienced since the first interview.
Twenty-seven volunteers participated in the original interview. Twenty-four from the original cohort participated in the one-year follow-up. Happiness as a sense of self and who you "should be" was challenged during the pandemic and changes in happiness over time were not systematic across classes. Stress was caused not only by the pandemic which was experienced by all, but by a tripartite state of individual circumstances, academic workload requirements, and the world at large. Primary themes from the interviews were clustered around the individual, learner, and future professional levels and focused on the primacy of relationships, emotional wellness, stress management, professional identity, and impacts of educational disruptions. These themes created risk factors for developing imposter syndrome. Students demonstrated resiliency across cohorts and were able to utilize a variety of strategies to achieve and maintain both physical and mental health, but the primacy of relationships both personally and professionally was noted.
Medical students' identities as individual persons, a learner, and future medical professionals were all impacted by the pandemic. The results from this study suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic and changes in the learning format and environment may create a new risk factor in the development of imposter syndrome. There is also an opportunity to re-consider resources to achieve and maintain wellness during a disrupted academic environment.
世界卫生组织宣布 COVID-19 疫情大流行后不久,医学院管理机构发布指导意见,建议暂停临床实习。在 COVID-19 疫苗问世之前,许多学校在理论和临床学年都实施了完全在线课程。这些在医学教育中前所未有的事件和范式转变可能导致学员倦怠、健康和心理健康问题。
本单机构研究采访了美国西南部一所医学院的一、二、三年级医学生。对他们进行了半结构化访谈,并使用纸质李克特量表问题对感知幸福感进行了评估,这些问题在访谈时和一年后进行,以了解他们的学生经历和幸福感受到了怎样的影响。此外,我们还要求参与者描述自第一次访谈以来经历的任何重大生活事件。
27 名志愿者参加了最初的访谈。24 名原始队列的参与者参加了为期一年的随访。在疫情期间,幸福感作为自我意识和“应该成为”的感觉受到了挑战,而且幸福感随时间的变化并不是在所有班级中都是系统的。压力不仅是由所有人都经历的大流行引起的,还与个人情况、学术工作量要求和整个世界的三重状态有关。访谈的主要主题围绕个人、学习者和未来专业人员三个层面展开,重点关注人际关系的首要地位、情感健康、压力管理、专业身份以及教育中断的影响。这些主题为产生冒名顶替综合征创造了风险因素。不同班级的学生都表现出了韧性,能够利用各种策略来实现和保持身心健康,但人际关系的首要地位,无论是个人层面还是职业层面,都得到了强调。
疫情对医学生作为个人、学习者和未来医学专业人员的身份都产生了影响。本研究结果表明,COVID-19 大流行以及学习模式和环境的变化可能成为冒名顶替综合征发展的新风险因素。在学术环境受到干扰的情况下,还有机会重新考虑实现和保持健康的资源。