22 February 2022
Dr Gerada provides an important analysis of and reflection on how medical professionals form their identity. This identity can manifest as a mature psychological defence mechanism in the face of vocational and personal challenges but also as a barrier to engagement in help-seeking behaviour, which can influence the professional dynamic when mental illness is being assessed. This pertinent issue has become all the more important as a result of ever-increasing mental health awareness and the seismic pressure on the healthcare system during the recent pandemic. With medical students across the globe being forced to retreat behind screens and the use of online platforms for teaching, there has been a distinct lack of engagement with the ‘hidden curricula’ highlighted within the article. For many, interpersonal skills have been reduced to simply clicking an automated reaction button during online teaching or using role-play scenarios with peers, as opposed to interacting with patients and professionals. Thus, Albert Bandura's social learning theory, which is based on the idea that imitation and observation of model behaviours can enable an observer to understand, learn and reproduce a desired behaviour,Reference Bandura1 has been curtailed. Formation and embedment of the early stages of the ‘medical self’ in these initial crucial training years has been compromised. Goldie emphasised the importance of meaningful student engagement in bedside teaching, ward rounds, feedback and mentoring as being central to formation of identity.Reference Goldie2 The pandemic aside, interestingly, it has been demonstrated that students’ beliefs about certain positive ‘medical self’ attributes, including empathy and idealism, become diminished throughout medical school training.Reference Gilligan, Loda, Junne, Zipfel, Kelly and Horton3 As students progress and spend more time observing the behaviour of doctors, and perhaps gain more insight into the reality of the job, the perception of an ‘ideal doctor’ changes to align much more with that of a ‘real doctor’. The ‘real doctor’ is not as hardened as one may think. At a pivotal time in my final year, this article has allowed reflection not only on the distress faced by doctors, but also that experienced by my peers. Prior to the pandemic, the level of mental illness among medical students was deemed to be higher than that of the general population.Reference Wege, Muth, Li and Angerer4 Frighteningly, the prevalence of anxiety and depression in this cohort has increased by 61% and 70%, respectively, since the era of COVID-19.Reference Halperin, Henderson, Prenner and Grauer5 These data have potentially significant implications for recent and upcoming graduates, as the traditional factors comprising student well-being, namely recognition of mental health symptomology and subsequent access to help, are limited. With ‘hidden curricula’ being largely inaccessible during this time, we are left with an already vulnerable population being born into the working world with less experience than their predecessors and perhaps less psychological reserve to cope with pressure. In summary, this is a very interesting article that has left me with plenty to ponder. Medical educational institutions must continue to adapt to allow their students to engage with the intangibles of the profession and gain a wider understanding of patient interaction and clinical activity wherever possible. It is reassuring to read that those in influential positions are taking steps towards eradicating the stigma around mental health disorders in the profession and recognising the compromising position that the illusion of ‘medical self’ has potential to put doctors in.
Declaration of interest
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