Litcius/Paper detail

Shared Living Experiences by Physicians have a Positive Impact on Mental Health Attitudes and Stigma among Medical Students: A Mixed-Methods Study

Andrés Martin, Julie Chilton, Cecilia Paasche, Nicole Nabatkhorian, Hilary Gortler, Erica Cohenmehr, Indigo Weller, Doron Amsalem, Stephanie Neary

2020Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Medical culture can make trainees feel like there is neither room for mistakes, nor space for personal shortcomings in the makeup of physicians. A dearth of role models who can exemplify that it is acceptable to need support compounds barriers to help-seeking once students struggle. We conducted a mixed-methods study to assess the impact of physicians sharing their living experiences with medical students. METHODS: Second-year medical students participated, through synchronized videoconferencing, in an intervention consisting of 3 physicians who shared personal histories of vulnerability (e.g. failure on high-stakes exams; immigration and acculturation stress; and personal psychopathology, including treatment and recovery), followed by facilitated, small-group discussions. For the quantitative component, students completed the Opening Minds to Stigma Scale for Health Care Providers (OMS-HC) before and after the intervention. For the qualitative component, we conducted focus groups to explore the study intervention. We analyzed anonymized transcripts using thematic analysis aided by NVivo software. RESULTS: < .001) subscales. We conducted 4 focus groups, each with a median of 6 participants (range, 5-7). We identified, through iterative thematic analysis of focus group transcripts, active components before, during, and after the intervention, with unexpected vulnerability and unarmored mutuality as particularly salient. CONCLUSIONS: Sharing histories of personal vulnerability by senior physicians can lessen stigmatized views of mental health and normalize help-seeking among medical students. Synchronous videoconferencing proved to be an effective delivery mechanism for the intervention in a 'virtual wellness' format. Candid sharing by physicians has the potential to enhance students' ability to recognize, address, and seek help for their own mental health needs.

Topics & Concepts

Focus groupThematic analysisStigma (botany)Intervention (counseling)PsychologyMental healthVulnerability (computing)Qualitative researchClinical psychologyMedicineMedical educationNursingPsychiatryComputer securityComputer scienceSociologyBusinessSocial scienceMarketingHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutMental Health Treatment and AccessCultural Competency in Health Care