Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure

Abstract Background To be a “good doctor” and have “good medical practices” are apparent goals for both medical students and medical faculties. However, the associated implicit and explicit standards could be a source of distress in the form of pressure to achieve professionalism. Self-compassion ha...

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Main Authors: Miroslav Světlák, Šárka Daňhelová, Barbora Kóša, Alena Slezáčková, Rastislav Šumec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02930-2
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spelling doaj-6259c88559f94028b7805ae232cb6fda2021-09-26T11:54:20ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-09-012111710.1186/s12909-021-02930-2Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressureMiroslav Světlák0Šárka Daňhelová1Barbora Kóša2Alena Slezáčková3Rastislav Šumec4Department of Psychology and Psychosomatics, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk UniversityDepartment of Psychology and Psychosomatics, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk UniversityDepartment of Psychology and Psychosomatics, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk UniversityDepartment of Psychology and Psychosomatics, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk UniversityDepartment of Psychology and Psychosomatics, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk UniversityAbstract Background To be a “good doctor” and have “good medical practices” are apparent goals for both medical students and medical faculties. However, the associated implicit and explicit standards could be a source of distress in the form of pressure to achieve professionalism. Self-compassion has been identified as a transtherapeutic factor that plays a crucial role in developing and maintaining mental health. It seems to be an essential meta-skill to learn, especially for medical students who often perceive imperfection as failure. In this pilot study, we investigated the qualities that medical students attribute to the “good doctor” concept, how they perceive themselves compared to this concept, and whether any possible discrepancy between these two perspectives could be associated with self-compassion. Methods Altogether, 301 medical students participated in the study (mean age 22.3 ± 2.1; 71.8 % female). The discrepancy between concepts was measured by a semantic differential consisting of a list of 36 adjectives and antonyms that students repeatedly mentioned in courses in their responses to the question “What should a doctor be like?” Self-compassion was measured by the Self-Compassion Scale. Results The obtained results offer an insight into students’ conceptualization of a “good doctor” and the hierarchy of given characteristics. Statistical analysis revealed significant associations between the discrepancy between the “ideal” doctor concept vs. actual self-perception and Self-Compassion Scale scores. The more students are compassionate to themselves, the lower the discrepancy. Conclusions The current pilot study supports the hypothesis that student self-compassion could play some role in the degree of discrepancy between the ideal “good doctor” image and student self-concept. This result could support the importance of educational interventions developing self-compassion for medical students. The proposed discrepancy measurement could also be a tool for measuring the effect of well-being programs aimed at self-compassion in medical students.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02930-2ProfessionalismSelf-compassionGood medical practiceMedical students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miroslav Světlák
Šárka Daňhelová
Barbora Kóša
Alena Slezáčková
Rastislav Šumec
spellingShingle Miroslav Světlák
Šárka Daňhelová
Barbora Kóša
Alena Slezáčková
Rastislav Šumec
Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
BMC Medical Education
Professionalism
Self-compassion
Good medical practice
Medical students
author_facet Miroslav Světlák
Šárka Daňhelová
Barbora Kóša
Alena Slezáčková
Rastislav Šumec
author_sort Miroslav Světlák
title Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
title_short Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
title_full Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
title_fullStr Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
title_full_unstemmed Self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
title_sort self-compassion in medical students: a pilot study of its association with professionalism pressure
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background To be a “good doctor” and have “good medical practices” are apparent goals for both medical students and medical faculties. However, the associated implicit and explicit standards could be a source of distress in the form of pressure to achieve professionalism. Self-compassion has been identified as a transtherapeutic factor that plays a crucial role in developing and maintaining mental health. It seems to be an essential meta-skill to learn, especially for medical students who often perceive imperfection as failure. In this pilot study, we investigated the qualities that medical students attribute to the “good doctor” concept, how they perceive themselves compared to this concept, and whether any possible discrepancy between these two perspectives could be associated with self-compassion. Methods Altogether, 301 medical students participated in the study (mean age 22.3 ± 2.1; 71.8 % female). The discrepancy between concepts was measured by a semantic differential consisting of a list of 36 adjectives and antonyms that students repeatedly mentioned in courses in their responses to the question “What should a doctor be like?” Self-compassion was measured by the Self-Compassion Scale. Results The obtained results offer an insight into students’ conceptualization of a “good doctor” and the hierarchy of given characteristics. Statistical analysis revealed significant associations between the discrepancy between the “ideal” doctor concept vs. actual self-perception and Self-Compassion Scale scores. The more students are compassionate to themselves, the lower the discrepancy. Conclusions The current pilot study supports the hypothesis that student self-compassion could play some role in the degree of discrepancy between the ideal “good doctor” image and student self-concept. This result could support the importance of educational interventions developing self-compassion for medical students. The proposed discrepancy measurement could also be a tool for measuring the effect of well-being programs aimed at self-compassion in medical students.
topic Professionalism
Self-compassion
Good medical practice
Medical students
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02930-2
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