Rodgers Angela Renee
From the Contra Costa Family Medicine Residency Program, UCSF Family and Community Medicine Department, Martinez, CA (AR).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2025 May 12;38(1):172-173. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2024.240117R1.
Health care professionals are known to prioritize the health of others over themselves. The culture of medicine incentivizes this idea of putting all others first before ourselves. This habit makes physicians with chronic disease less likely to address the psychosocial aspect of how their chronic disease impacts their life. Psychosocial impact of chronic disease can include feelings such as isolation, shame, a false sense of contentment or even depression and anxiety among others. Routinely connecting with those with shared diagnoses offers validation, support, and a sense of freedom. As a woman of color with autoimmune hair loss (alopecia areata), Dr. Angela Rodgers shares her experience attending Baldie Con in 2023, a new national conference for women with various types of hair loss. She reveals how the experience unearthed truths about the relationship between physicians and their diagnoses and provides evidence-based advice on how to stay connected with community.
众所周知,医疗保健专业人员会将他人的健康置于自己之上。医学文化鼓励这种把他人放在自己之前的观念。这种习惯使得患有慢性病的医生不太可能去处理慢性病如何影响他们生活的社会心理方面。慢性病的社会心理影响可能包括孤独感、羞耻感、虚假的满足感,甚至抑郁和焦虑等情绪。经常与有相同诊断的人交流能带来认可、支持和自由感。作为一名患有自身免疫性脱发(斑秃)的有色人种女性,安吉拉·罗杰斯博士分享了她参加2023年秃发大会的经历,这是一个面向各种脱发类型女性的新的全国性会议。她揭示了这次经历如何揭示了医生与其诊断之间关系的真相,并提供了关于如何与社区保持联系的循证建议。