Latest News

Impostor syndrome is a risk for doctors of all ages


 

Feelings of inadequacy, in terms of skills and expectations in an ever-changing system, are common emotions that many doctors have experienced since the start of the pandemic.

COVID-19 imposed challenges on health care professionals and systems by forcing changes in how doctors organize themselves professionally as well as in their relationships with patients and in their expectations (realistic or not) of their roles. The situation was bound to generate high rates of frustration and discomfort among younger and older physicians. It was compounded by a generational transition of the profession, which was accelerated by the virus. It was not managed by the decision-makers and was painful for doctors and patients.

Impostor syndrome (IS) is a psychological construct characterized by the persistent belief that one’s success is undeserved, rather than stemming from personal effort, skill, and ability. The phenomenon is common among medics for various reasons, including professional burnout. Recent studies have helped to better define the extent and characteristic features of the syndrome, as well as efforts to combat it.

Doctors and burnout

Although occupational burnout among physicians is a systemic issue primarily attributable to problems in the practice environment, professional norms and aspects of medical culture often contribute to the distress that individual physicians experience.

These dimensions have been well characterized and include suggestions that physicians should be impervious to normal human limitations (that is, superhuman), that work should always come first, and that seeking help is a sign of weakness. In aggregate, these attitudes lead many physicians to engage in unhealthy levels of self-sacrifice, manifested by excessive work hours, anxiety about missing something that would benefit their patients, and prioritizing work over personal health. These factors are familiar to many hospital-based and family physicians.

The impostor phenomenon

The impostor phenomenon (IP) is a psychological experience of intellectual and professional fraud. Individuals who suffer from it believe that others have inflated perceptions of the individual’s abilities and fear being judged. This fear persists despite continual proof of the individual’s successes. These people ignore praise, are highly self-critical, and attribute their successes to external factors, such as luck, hard work, or receiving help from others, rather than to qualities such as skill, intelligence, or ability.

IP is common among men and women. Some studies suggest it may be more prevalent among women. Studies across industries suggest that the phenomenon is associated with personal consequences (for example, low emotional well-being, problems with work-life integration, anxiety, depression, suicide) and professional consequences (for example, impaired job performance, occupational burnout). Studies involving U.S. medical students have revealed that more than one in four medical students experience IP and that those who experience it are at higher risk for burnout.

Surveying IS

IS, which is not a formal psychiatric diagnosis, is defined as having feelings of uncertainty, inadequacy, and being undeserving of one’s achievements despite evidence to the contrary. There are five subtypes of IS:

  • Perfectionist: insecurity related to self-imposed, unachievable goals
  • Expert: feeling inadequate from lacking sufficient knowledge
  • Superperson: assuming excessive workloads just to feel okay among peers
  • Natural genius: experiencing shame when it takes effort to develop a skill
  • Soloist: believing that requesting help is a sign of weakness

Pages

Recommended Reading

Should you dismiss a difficult patient?
MDedge Neurology
Harvard medical school sued over stolen body part scandal
MDedge Neurology
New law allows international medical graduates to bypass U.S. residency
MDedge Neurology
New DEA CME mandate affects 2 million prescribers
MDedge Neurology
Safety first: Regulations
MDedge Neurology
Residency match process under scrutiny again, this time by AMA
MDedge Neurology
Flying cars and subdermal labs
MDedge Neurology
Mental health questions cut from MD licensing applications in 21 states
MDedge Neurology
Long COVID patients turn to doctors for help with disability claims
MDedge Neurology
Patient aggression against receptionists demands protocols
MDedge Neurology