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'It gives you an understanding you can't get from any book.' The relationship between medical students' and doctors' personal illness experiences and their performance: a qualitative and quantitative study

'It gives you an understanding you can't get from any book.' The relationship between medical students' and doctors' personal illness experiences and their performance: a qualitative and quantitative study
'It gives you an understanding you can't get from any book.' The relationship between medical students' and doctors' personal illness experiences and their performance: a qualitative and quantitative study
Background: anecdotes abound about doctors' personal illness experiences and the effect they have on their empathy and care of patients. We formally investigated the relationship between doctors' and medical students' personal illness experiences, their examination results, preparedness for clinical practice, learning and professional attitudes and behaviour towards patients.Methods: newly-qualified UK doctors in 2005 (n = 2062/4784), and two cohorts of students at one London medical school (n = 640/749) participated in the quantitative arm of the study. 37 Consultants, 1 Specialist Registrar, 2 Clinical Skills Tutors and 25 newly-qualified doctors participated in the qualitative arm. Newly-qualified doctors and medical students reported their personal illness experiences in a questionnaire. Doctors' experiences were correlated with self-reported preparedness for their new clinical jobs. Students' experiences were correlated with their examination results, and self-reported anxiety and depression. Interviews with clinical teachers, newly-qualified doctors and senior doctors qualitatively investigated how personal illness experiences affect learning, professional attitudes, and behaviour.Results: 85.5% of newly-qualified doctors and 54.4% of medical students reported personal illness experiences. Newly-qualified doctors who had been ill felt less prepared for starting work (p < 0.001), but those who had only experienced illness in a relative or friend felt more prepared (p = 0.02). Clinical medical students who had been ill were more anxious (p = 0.01) and had lower examination scores (p = 0.006). Doctors felt their personal illness experiences helped them empathise and communicate with patients. Medical students with more life experience were perceived as more mature, empathetic, and better learners; but illness at medical school was recognised to impede learning.Conclusion: the majority of the medical students and newly qualified doctors we studied reported personal illness experiences, and these experiences were associated with lower undergraduate examination results, higher anxiety, and lower preparedness. However reflection on such experiences may have improved professional attitudes such as empathy and compassion for patients. Future research is warranted in this area.
Attitude of Health Personnel, Attitude to Health, Critical Illness/psychology, Educational Measurement/statistics & numerical data, Empathy, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Female, Humans, Life Change Events, London, Male, Physician-Patient Relations, Physicians/psychology, Qualitative Research, Students, Medical/psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires
1472-6920
Woolf, Katherine
93dd0083-bb5a-4e20-85ac-697dff38de49
Cave, Judith
60c67e39-121a-49ca-8594-93e8e456464f
McManus, I. Chris
70330711-bfc2-41b3-a343-023ccca1600e
Dacre, Jane E
72e07eb3-be85-493d-a4bf-2d02e86dadc9
Woolf, Katherine
93dd0083-bb5a-4e20-85ac-697dff38de49
Cave, Judith
60c67e39-121a-49ca-8594-93e8e456464f
McManus, I. Chris
70330711-bfc2-41b3-a343-023ccca1600e
Dacre, Jane E
72e07eb3-be85-493d-a4bf-2d02e86dadc9

Woolf, Katherine, Cave, Judith, McManus, I. Chris and Dacre, Jane E (2007) 'It gives you an understanding you can't get from any book.' The relationship between medical students' and doctors' personal illness experiences and their performance: a qualitative and quantitative study. BMC Medical Education, 7. (doi:10.1186/1472-6920-7-50).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: anecdotes abound about doctors' personal illness experiences and the effect they have on their empathy and care of patients. We formally investigated the relationship between doctors' and medical students' personal illness experiences, their examination results, preparedness for clinical practice, learning and professional attitudes and behaviour towards patients.Methods: newly-qualified UK doctors in 2005 (n = 2062/4784), and two cohorts of students at one London medical school (n = 640/749) participated in the quantitative arm of the study. 37 Consultants, 1 Specialist Registrar, 2 Clinical Skills Tutors and 25 newly-qualified doctors participated in the qualitative arm. Newly-qualified doctors and medical students reported their personal illness experiences in a questionnaire. Doctors' experiences were correlated with self-reported preparedness for their new clinical jobs. Students' experiences were correlated with their examination results, and self-reported anxiety and depression. Interviews with clinical teachers, newly-qualified doctors and senior doctors qualitatively investigated how personal illness experiences affect learning, professional attitudes, and behaviour.Results: 85.5% of newly-qualified doctors and 54.4% of medical students reported personal illness experiences. Newly-qualified doctors who had been ill felt less prepared for starting work (p < 0.001), but those who had only experienced illness in a relative or friend felt more prepared (p = 0.02). Clinical medical students who had been ill were more anxious (p = 0.01) and had lower examination scores (p = 0.006). Doctors felt their personal illness experiences helped them empathise and communicate with patients. Medical students with more life experience were perceived as more mature, empathetic, and better learners; but illness at medical school was recognised to impede learning.Conclusion: the majority of the medical students and newly qualified doctors we studied reported personal illness experiences, and these experiences were associated with lower undergraduate examination results, higher anxiety, and lower preparedness. However reflection on such experiences may have improved professional attitudes such as empathy and compassion for patients. Future research is warranted in this area.

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Published date: 5 December 2007
Keywords: Attitude of Health Personnel, Attitude to Health, Critical Illness/psychology, Educational Measurement/statistics & numerical data, Empathy, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Female, Humans, Life Change Events, London, Male, Physician-Patient Relations, Physicians/psychology, Qualitative Research, Students, Medical/psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires

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Local EPrints ID: 487385
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487385
ISSN: 1472-6920
PURE UUID: a3909a2f-f234-43b9-a777-77dae7d82edd

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2024 11:25
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:40

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Contributors

Author: Katherine Woolf
Author: Judith Cave
Author: I. Chris McManus
Author: Jane E Dacre

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