| Literature DB >> 35301685 |
Wil L Santivasi1, Hannah C Nordhues2, Frederic W Hafferty3, Brianna E Vaa Stelling4, John T Ratelle5, Thomas J Beckman2, Adam P Sawatsky6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Professional identity formation (PIF) is the internalization of characteristics, values, and norms of the medical profession. An individual's identity formation has both psychological and sociological influences. Social psychology may be useful to explore the interactions between the psychological and sociological aspects of PIF. In this study, we explored how resident physicians navigated tensions between professional ideals and the reality of medical practice to characterize PIF during residency training.Entities:
Keywords: Postgraduate medical education; Professional identity formation; Qualitative research; Social cognitive theory
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35301685 PMCID: PMC8941044 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-022-00709-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Fig. 1Schematic of the bidirectional influence between identity, behavior, and context, adapted from Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory. Bandura’s “reciprocal determinism” described that behavior, personal factors, and environmental influences operated interactively as determinants of one another. We have adapted this model, focusing on “identity” as a summarization of “personal factors” to represent the process of professional identity formation during residency as a complex, dynamic bidirectional interaction between identity, behavior, and context
Fig. 2Schematic of professional identity formation as the bidirectional influences between identity, behavior, and context in reframing “A good doctor convinces patients to accept [his/her] advice.” Arrows represent directional influences between identity, behavior, and context. Associated bulleted examples were identified by the resident as factors in reframing his ideal of “a good doctor convinces patients to accept [his/her] advice” to “a good doctor is a consultant; patients make decisions for themselves.” These bulleted examples are associated with the adjacent arrow
Fig. 3Schematic of professional identity formation as the bidirectional influences between identity, behavior, and context in reframing “A good doctor knows everything.” Arrows represent directional influences between identity, behavior, and context. Associated bulleted examples were identified by the resident as factors in reframing the ideal of “a good doctor knows everything” to “a good doctor knows his/her limitations and asks for help.” These bulleted examples are associated with the adjacent arrow