Academic achievement, depression and anxiety during medical education predict the styles of success in a medical career: A 10-year longitudinal study
Date
2012Author
Walkiewicz, Maciej
Tartas, Małgorzata
Majkowicz, Mikołaj
Budziński, Waldemar
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: Our study investigated the styles of success in the medical career in young physicians, in comparison with the same subjects
examined 4–10 years earlier.
Methods: The participants were first studied when they applied to the medical university (1999). Questionnaires were sent to all
students each year (2000–2005). Fifty-four medical doctors participated in the first phase of the study completed a questionnaire
four years after graduation. The current questionnaire included measures of burnout, satisfaction with medicine as a career, quality
of life (QOL) and postgraduate examination results. Previous questionnaires had included measures of academic achievement,
depression and anxiety.
Results: We can describe three different styles of success, which can be predicted during medical education. Physicians with the
best professional competence have the lowest income. However, physicians with the lowest professional competence gain the
highest income. Those with the highest QOL (general well-being and life satisfaction) have the lowest professional stress and
vulnerability to burnout. Anxiety and academic achievement (during the second and fourth year of study) are the significant
predictors of specific style belonging.
Conclusions: Our results may be useful to medical school admissions and resident selection committees to identify candidates at
risk for less satisfaction or less competence.
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