Medical students' evolving perspectives on their personal health care: Clinical and educational implications of a longitudinal study☆
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Sources of stress for pharmacy students in a nationwide sample
2014, Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and LearningCitation Excerpt :Health concerns were not a primary stressor, unlike what has been found previously for pharmacy students.19 Similar to medical students,34 pharmacy students may underreport or refuse treatment for health concerns because illness is stigmatized, or it is ignored in order to prevent academic consequences (e.g., missing rotations or exams).35 Another possibility is that this item may have been ambiguous, resulting in fewer participants selecting it.
Medical students as patients: Implications of their dual role as explored in a vignette-based survey study of 1027 medical students at nine medical schools
2011, Comprehensive PsychiatryCitation Excerpt :An emerging literature suggests that medical students, like their physician colleagues, encounter significant obstacles when seeking personal health care [1-15]. Medical student–patients may have little time, few financial resources, limited access to venues for confidential care, and no or insufficient health insurance [6-9]. These barriers to appropriate care are worrisome in light of the significant mental and physical health issues experienced by physicians-in-training, such as increased rates of stress, anxiety, depression, suicide, alcohol use, and substance abuse, as well as heightened risk for developing hypertension and coronary artery disease and for exposure to infectious agents [3,16,17].
Mental health and quality of life across 6 years of medical training: A year-by-year analysis
2024, International Journal of Social Psychiatry
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Supported in part by a seed grant from the Clinical Psychiatry/Psychology Research Foundation.