The impact of emotionally challenging situations on medical students' professional identity formation

被引:18
作者
Lonn, Annalena [1 ]
Weurlander, Maria [2 ]
Seeberger, Astrid [1 ]
Hult, Hakan [1 ]
Thornberg, Robert [3 ]
Wernerson, Annika [1 ]
机构
[1] Karolinska Inst, Dept Clin Sci Intervent & Technol CLINTEC, Div Renal Med, Alfred Nobels Alle 8, S-14152 Stockholm, Sweden
[2] Stockholm Univ, Dept Educ, Stockholm, Sweden
[3] Linkoping Univ, Dept Behav Sci & Learning, Linkoping, Sweden
基金
瑞典研究理事会;
关键词
Emotionally challenging situations; Medical students; Narrative data; Grounded theory; Self-awareness; Professional identity formation; SELF-REFLECTION; EDUCATION; EXPERIENCE; PREDICTORS; AWARENESS;
D O I
10.1007/s10459-023-10229-8
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
In their interactions with patients and health care professionals during work-based learning, medical students are known to experience emotionally challenging situations that can evoke negative feelings. Students have to manage these emotions. Students learn and develop their professional identity formation through interactions with patients and members of the healthcare teams. Earlier studies have highlighted the issues involved with processing emotionally challenging situations, although studies concerning learning and professional identity formation in response to these experiences are rare. In this study, we explored medical students' experiences of emotionally challenging situations in work-based learning, and the impact these experiences had on forming medical students' professional identities. We conducted an analysis of narrative data (n = 85), using a constructivist grounded theory approach. The narratives were made up of medical students' reflective essays at the end of their education (tenth term). The analysis showed that students' main concern when facing emotionally challenging situations during their work-based education was the struggle to achieve and maintain a professional approach. They reported different strategies for managing their feelings and how these strategies led to diverse consequences. In the process, students also described arriving at insights into their own personal needs and shortcomings. We consider this development of self-awareness and resulting self-knowledge to be an important part of the continuously ongoing socialization process of forming a professional identity. Thus, experiencing emotionally challenging situations can be considered a unique and invaluable opportunity, as well as a catalyst for students' development. We believe that highlighting the impact of emotions in medical education can constitute an important contribution to knowledge about the process of professional identity formation. This knowledge can enable faculty to provide students with more effective and sufficient support, facilitating their journey in becoming physicians.
引用
收藏
页码:1557 / 1578
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Becoming a physician for older patients: exploring the professional identity formation of medical students during a nursing home clerkship. A qualitative study [J].
Moll-Jongerius, Annemarie ;
Langeveld, Kirsten ;
Helmich, Esther ;
Masud, Tahir ;
Kramer, Anneke W. M. ;
Achterberg, Wilco P. .
BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2023, 23 (01)
[42]   Professional Identity in Medical Students: Pedagogical Challenges to Medical Education [J].
Wilson, Ian ;
Cowin, Leanne S. ;
Johnson, Maree ;
Young, Helen .
TEACHING AND LEARNING IN MEDICINE, 2013, 25 (04) :369-373
[43]   Medical Students’ Creation of Original Poetry, Comics, and Masks to Explore Professional Identity Formation [J].
Johanna Shapiro ;
Juliet McMullin ;
Gabriella Miotto ;
Tan Nguyen ;
Anju Hurria ;
Minh Anh Nguyen .
Journal of Medical Humanities, 2021, 42 :603-625
[44]   Racial and Ethnic Discrimination and Medical Students' Identity Formation [J].
Venkataraman, Shruthi ;
Nguyen, Mytien ;
Chaudhry, Sarwat I. ;
Desai, Mayur M. ;
Hajduk, Alexandra M. ;
Mason, Hyacinth R. C. ;
Webber, Alexis ;
Boatright, Dowin .
JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2024, 7 (10)
[45]   Exploring medical students' professional identity formation through written reflections during the COVID-19 pandemic [J].
Findyartini, Ardi ;
Anggraeni, Dewi ;
Husin, Joseph Mikhael ;
Greviana, Nadia .
JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH, 2020, 9 :4-10
[46]   Exploring aspects of medical students' professional identity through their reflective expressions [J].
Avargil, Shirly ;
Saleh, Abir ;
Kerem, Nogah C. .
BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2025, 25 (01)
[47]   Exploring the Hidden Curriculum's Impact on Medical Students: Professionalism, Identity Formation and the Need for Transparency [J].
Brown, Megan E. L. ;
Coker, Oluwafemi ;
Heybourne, Annabel ;
Finn, Gabrielle M. .
MEDICAL SCIENCE EDUCATOR, 2020, 30 (03) :1107-1121
[48]   EXPLORING FIRST GRADE MEDICAL STUDENTS'PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY USING METAPHORS [J].
Shabir, Anum ;
Malik, Maryam Nawaz ;
Afzal, Iqra .
INDO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 2019, 6 (06) :12723-12729
[49]   “Can virtue be taught?”: a content analysis of medical students’ opinions of the professional and ethical challenges to their professional identity formation [J].
Michael Hawking ;
Jenny Kim ;
Melody Jih ;
Chelsea Hu ;
John D. Yoon .
BMC Medical Education, 20
[50]   Nursing and pharmacy students' use of emotionally intelligent behaviours to manage challenging interpersonal situations with staff during clinical placement: A qualitative study [J].
McCloughen, Andrea ;
Foster, Kim .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2018, 27 (13-14) :2699-2709