Prevalence of health-related behaviors among physicians and medical trainees.

Title

Prevalence of health-related behaviors among physicians and medical trainees.

Creator

Hull Sharon K; DiLalla Lisabeth F; Dorsey J Kevin

Publisher

Academic psychiatry : the journal of the American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training and the Association for Academic Psychiatry

Date

2008
2008-02

Description

OBJECTIVE: The authors studied the prevalence of health-promoting and health-risking behaviors among physicians and physicians-in-training. Given the significant potential for negative outcomes to physicians' own health as well as the health and safety of their patients, examination of the natural history of this acculturation process about physician self-care and wellness is critical to the improvement of the western health care delivery system. METHODS: 963 matriculating medical students, residents, or attending physicians completed the Empathy, Spirituality, and Wellness in Medicine (ESWIM) survey between the years 2000 and 2004. Items specific to physician wellness were analyzed. These included healthy behaviors as well as risk behaviors. RESULTS: Both medical students and attending physicians scored higher in overall wellness than did residents. Residents were the lowest scoring group for getting enough sleep, using seatbelts, and exercising. Medical students were more likely to smoke tobacco and drink alcohol. Medical students reported less depression and anxiety and more social contacts. CONCLUSION: Medical school training may prevent students from maintaining healthy behaviors, so that by the time they are residents they exercise less, sleep less, and spend less time in organizational activities outside of medical school. If physicians do not engage in these healthy behaviors, they are less likely to encourage such behaviors in their patients and patients are less likely to listen to them even if they do talk about it.

Subject

*Health Behavior; 80 and over; Acculturation; Adult; Aged; Empathy; Female; Humans; Internship and Residency/*statistics & numerical data; Male; Middle Aged; Physicians/*statistics & numerical data; Prevalence; Spirituality

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Pages

31–38

Issue

1

Volume

32

Citation

Hull Sharon K; DiLalla Lisabeth F; Dorsey J Kevin, “Prevalence of health-related behaviors among physicians and medical trainees.,” NEOMED Bibliography Database, accessed April 19, 2024, https://neomed.omeka.net/items/show/4769.