From medical student to junior doctor : maintaining good health during the “baptism of fire”
Long working hours, sleep deprivation, and
fatigue are just a few examples of the stressors experienced by
junior doctors.
In the seventh article of our series, Geoffrey Robinson and
colleagues give advice on how to overcome these problems
The transition from medical student to junior doctor is one of the most
demanding phases of a medical career. The junior doctor years are
associated with a variety of stressors, which can make doctors
vulnerable to several important psychological and medical
illnesses. This article reviews these conditions and offers
suggestions for prevention as well as early detection and
treatment.
Emotional and psychological health
Medical students as a group are susceptible to
a particular range of health problems, including depression and
substance misuse. This may be partly a result of the prevailing
culture of medical schools (box 1). The social climate engendered
by this culture has traditionally normalised heavy alcohol use for
male students.1 More recently, women students have begun to develop
this pattern of drinking behaviour. Recreational drug use among
medical students is less well studied, but it is known that drug
use among university students is not uncommon, and this probably
applies to medical students as well.2
Box 1: Aspects of medical school culture
-
Industriousness — workaholism
-
Elitism
-
Competitiveness
(versus cooperation)
-
Ambition
-
Individualism
(versus team work)
-
Intolerance
of difference
-
Prioritising
strength and confidence
-
Controlling
emotions (versus empathy or expression)
-
Specialist
academic teaching
The selection process for medical school may
favour individuals with perfectionist, obsessive-compulsive, self
critical, and altruistic traits, all of which predispose to
vulnerability to psychological illness. Psychiatric morbidity,
particularly depression, has been found in up to one in three
senior medical students.3-4
Although this background of pre-existing
vulnerability needs to be acknowledged, the main focus of this
article is the impact on health of the considerable occupational
stressors experienced by junior doctors. Historically, this
“baptism of fire” has been regarded as a normal and
even character building process on the path to senior doctor
status. It is now recognised that the cost of this attitude is a
high degree of psychological morbidity in the junior doctor
workforce, which has consequences for the doctors concerned, the
patients under their care, and the healthcare system as a whole.
Box 2 lists some of the stressors experienced by junior doctors.
These contribute to the high rates of depression and suicide (which
may be more prevalent in women doctors), alcohol abuse or
dependency, drug abuse, and burnout found in junior doctors.5
-6 Burnout
refers to the syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation,
and reduced feelings of personal accomplishment.4-6
Box 2: Stressors on junior doctors
-
Sleep
deprivation and fatigue
-
Long
hours and time pressure
-
Low job
satisfaction; career disillusionment
-
Responsibilities
beyond one's training
-
Peer
pressure for a stoical work ethic
-
Limited
control over work
-
Professional
isolation—for example, on night duties
-
Postgraduate
training and examinations
- Geographical
relocation during training
-
Intrusion
of work on young families and relationships
-
Routine
interaction with fear, illness, uncertainty, and death
-
Variable
clinical and educational supervision and support
- Student debt
Physical health
Most studies on doctors' health focus on
psychological health problems, perhaps because these conditions are
the most recognisable ones. However, some of the physical health
issues particularly relevant to doctors merit review. Although
doctors have a low standardised mortality rate, this is largely due
to a low prevalence of smoking. As with medical students, junior
doctors are particularly vulnerable to infectious diseases such as
influenza, tuberculosis, hepatitis B and C, and HIV, as a result of
occupational exposure.7
Box 3: Early warning signs of a developing
health problem
Drug and alcohol abuse
- Frequent
drinking after work engendering guilt, partner complaints, or
morning hangovers
-
Acquiring
hypnotic drugs from the ward or self prescribing
-
Concealed use
of marijuana or other drugs
Stress and depression
-
Loss of
enjoyment or participation in previous recreational activities
- Increasing
feelings of anger towards patients, nurses, and junior colleagues
-
Increasing
sense of dread about going to work
-
A feeling of
liability to patients and team members
-
Absenteeism
A major concern is that the management of
illness among junior doctors tends to be worse than that in the
non-medical population. It would be reasonable to assume that
junior doctors have unparalleled access to appropriate medical
care, but the reality is different. Paradoxically, there are
several barriers to doctors receiving appropriate health care,
including embarrassment (one in four doctors reports inhibitions
about seeing another doctor), erroneous perceptions that they
should be able to manage their own health, or lack of time to see
to their own health needs.8 Only about half of doctors have their own general
practitioner, and less than a quarter have an independent general
practitioner.9 “Corridor consultations” are
common, and many doctors write their own scripts for drugs, ranging
from antibiotics to sedatives. While not illegal, this practice has
often led to problems and complications for the doctor patient.
Such patterns of inappropriate health care and self neglect often
develop early in a doctor's career, and they are not helped
by pressure of workload and frequent moves.
Doctors are also surprisingly poor at managing
their own preventive health. One study found that a disturbing 30%
of female doctors have never had a cervical smear test.9 Despite the
obvious occupational risks, vaccination rates for hepatitis B may
be as low as 50% among junior doctors.9
Addressing the situation
Warning signs
A number of warning signs can alert the junior
doctor to the development of a health problem. Box 3 lists some of
these signs, which were compiled from the authors' experience
of working with young doctors. The signs relate primarily to stress
and depression and to alcohol and drug abuse, any of which may
result in absenteeism. We suggest that you read this list with a
high degree of self reflection.
The greatest barriers to early detection and
resolution of psychological problems are denial of their existence
and the perception that they happen only to other people. As a
result, look out for the signs in yourself, as well as in your
colleagues.
Maintaining health
Box 4 offers some tips to help junior doctors
protect and maintain their health. We particularly highlight the
need for all junior doctors to develop a relationship with a
general practitioner. This provides an initial port of call for all
health problems as well as a confidential and experienced source of
advice and support. Avoid informal “corridor
consultations” and do not self prescribe. Despite the demands
of the job, make sure you maintain your outside interests, which
may have to be scheduled within your daily practice. It is
important to find a mentor at specialist registrar or consultant
level and to arrange regular meetings.
Role of hospitals and colleges
Employers and colleges have responsibilities
to help junior doctors improve their health.
These include the development of formal
support systems for junior doctors, addressing working conditions
and hours, and the appointment of accessible junior doctor liaison
officers. Hospitals need to provide appropriate orientation and
meaningful educational supervision with feedback, to reduce
non-medical work such as clerical tasks, and to organise part time
or job sharing work opportunities.
Junior doctors' organisations have been
active in identifying the problems and achieving these changes but
would probably agree that there is still room for improvement in
these areas.
It is vital that attendance at formal training
programmes is maintained to ensure both professional and personal
development. This is a right of trainees which must be respected by
all team members, including consultants.
Conclusion
The major health issues of junior doctors,
which include depression, alcohol and drug abuse, burnout, and
suboptimally managed medical conditions, may have been neglected
because junior doctors are in some senses a “transient work
force.” The implications of junior doctor ill health can be
major, not only
for the doctors but also for their patients, and
it may result in suboptimal work performance.10 For all patients,
including the sick doctor, early detection and treatment improves
prognosis, and prevention is still better than cure.

TDY/rex
Box 4: Tips for junior doctors to stay healthy
Do not
- Self prescribe
- Go to work when
you are ill
Maintain
- Friendships and
outside interests
- A high degree
of vigilance over your health
Find
- An independent
general practitioner
- A mentor
- A support group
(formal or informal)
Make sure
- You get enough
“catch-up” sleep
- You keep your
vaccinations up to date
Prioritise
- Holidays
(arrange well in advance)
- Stress
reduction activities (for example, exercise and meditation)
Geoffrey Robinson, general physician and chief medical officer, Capital and Coast District Health Board, Wellington, New Zealand
Email:
Sharmila Bernau, senior research fellow, Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand
Sarah Aldington senior research fellow, senior research fellow, Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand
Richard Beasley, general physician, Medical Research Institute of New Zealand and Wellington Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand
Email: Richard.Beasley@mrinz.ac.nz
studentBMJ 2006;14:133 - 176 April ISSN 0966-6494
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Webb E, Ashton CH, Kelly P, Kamali F. Alcohol
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Firth J. Levels and sources of stress in
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Willcock SM, Daly MG, Tennant CT, Allard BJ.
Burnout and psychiatric morbidity in new medical graduates. Med J Aust 2004;181:
357-60.
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Booth M, Smith DF. Job satisfaction amongst
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Thomas NK. Resident burnout. JAMA 2004;292:
2880-9.
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Gamester CF, Tilzey AJ, Banatvala JE. Medical
students' risk of infection with bloodborne viruses at home
and abroad: questionnaire survey. BMJ 1999;318:158-60.
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Shadbolt NE. Attitudes to healthcare and
self-care among junior medical officers: a preliminary report. Med J Aust 2002;177(suppl
1): S19-S20.
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Kay MP, Mitchell GK, Del Mar CB. Doctors do
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Houston DM, Allt SK. Psychological distress
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Responses published this month
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Articles
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Responses
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EDUCATION
From medical student to junior doctor : maintaining good health during the "baptism of fire"
Geoffrey Robinson, Sharmila Bernau, Sarah Aldington, Richard Beasley (April 2006)
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Ajay Dhakal (April 15th, 2006)
Read this response
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EDUCATION
From medical student to junior doctor : maintaining good health during the “baptism of fire”
Geoffrey Robinson, Sharmila Bernau, Sarah Aldington, Richard Beasley (April 2006)
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Ajay Dhakal (April 15th, 2006)
3rd Year MBBS Student, Kathmandu Medical College
ajaydhakal@hotmail.com
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Self prescription places a great threat for the health of the medical students. The exposure to the drugs and their knowledge of pharmacology make them self prescribe1. As it said "the doctors deny the need to become patients" the junior doctors and medical students indulge in self prescription. And in search of better health they end up in drug addiction. It is shown that one of the major causes of drug addiction is the exposure of the drugs and that the psychiatrist, anesthesiologist and emergency physicians are more prone to have drug addiction2. We have seen that drug abuse and alcoholism possibly under the circumstances of stress and depression are often associated with suicides of physicians2.
Being reluctant to seek an expert help, the medical students take the help of drugs in their fight against the immense stressors of medical studies and land up with drug addiction which may lead to the termination of life as well.
The measure of the health of our profession is not only how well we care for our patients but also how well we care for ourselves. The medical worker involved in drug abuse is shown to have more mood swings, unexplained absences, repeated health problems and above all more medical errors than others uninvolved1. Thus to become a good doctor one should stay away from the drug abuse.
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Verghese A. Physicians and addiction. N Engl J Med, Vol. 346, No. 20 May 16, 2002
- Schernhammer E. Taking their own lives- The high rate of Physician suicide. N Engl J Med 352;24 june 16, 2005
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