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Residents In These Medical Specialties Have The Most Regrets

Discussion in 'Doctors Cafe' started by Dr.Scorpiowoman, Dec 28, 2018.

  1. Dr.Scorpiowoman

    Dr.Scorpiowoman Golden Member

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    One in seven medical residents reported regret about their career choice, which was strongly linked to symptoms of burnout. And 7 percent reported regret about their specialty choice, according to the results of a survey of more than 3,500 second-year residents. Published in JAMA, the research found four key factors that led to clinical specialty career choice regret.

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    The AMA’s Reimagining Residency initiative is a $15 million grant program to support graduate medical education innovation, with the aim of transforming residency training to best address the workforce needs of our current and future health care system. The initiative will support new approaches that provide a meaningful and safe transition from medical school to residency, establish new curricular content and experiences to enhance readiness for practice, and promote well-being in training.

    The AMA provides a guide for medical students on choosing a medical specialty that presents a clear, approachable overview of specialties and subspecialties and can assist you in choosing a career path.

    Check Here: Medical Specialty Quiz

    According to the JAMA study, residents in these five medical specialties experienced the highest percentage of career-choice regret:

    • Pathology—32.7 percent.
    • Anesthesiology—20.6 percent.
    • General surgery—19.1 percent.
    • Neurology—17.4 percent.
    • Psychiatry—16.9 percent.
    In the study, “Association of Clinical Specialty With Symptoms of Burnout and Career Choice Regret Among U.S. Resident Physicians,” residents were asked whether they would choose to become a physician again, and whether they would choose the same specialty.


    By contrast, with less than 10 percent of residents in these specialties expressed regret about their career choices:

    • Plastic surgery—7.4 percent.
    • Family medicine—8.9 percent.
    • Otolaryngology—9 percent.
    The study found that most residents were satisfied with their career and specialty choice—similar to practicing physicians. Pathology and anesthesiology, however, had a low prevalence of burnout. The low prevalence of burnout among pathology and anesthesiology residents signals that career-choice regret might be due to other factors.

    “What you see is that burnout is a very strong independent predictor of career-choice regret in residents, but that residents in pathology and anesthesiology were more likely to have career-choice regret relative to those in internal medicine,” said the study’s lead author, Liselotte Dyrbye, MD, co-director of the Program for Physician Well-Being at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

    Residents who were burned out were three times more likely to experience career-choice regret. Increased burnout among certain specialties may be attributed to unique characteristics of their work environment. Supervising physicians in these specialties might also make an impact—modeling burnout to residents and placing them at greater risk.

    The AMA Ed Hub™, your center for personalized learning from sources you trust, offers AMA STEPS Forward™ modules on professional well-being.

    These include “Physician Wellness: Preventing Resident and Fellow Burnout: Create a holistic, supportive culture of wellness,” which will help you understand the key aspects of personal well-being and the steps needed to develop a wellness program.

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