The Effects of Stress on Physicians and Their Medical Practice

EACH day physicians encounter stresses that are an intrinsic part of medical practice. Those who are vulnerable may become unable to practice medicine without the intrusion of seriously neurotic or inappropriate behavior: that is, they become impaired physicians. In nonimpaired physicians, adaptatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 1982-02, Vol.306 (8), p.458-463
1. Verfasser: McCue, Jack D
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container_title The New England journal of medicine
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creator McCue, Jack D
description EACH day physicians encounter stresses that are an intrinsic part of medical practice. Those who are vulnerable may become unable to practice medicine without the intrusion of seriously neurotic or inappropriate behavior: that is, they become impaired physicians. In nonimpaired physicians, adaptations to the unalterable stresses of medicine may be productive and may actually improve the quality of medical care. Unfortunately, adaptations are often unproductive, resulting in poorer quality or uneconomical care, or they may adversely affect the personal lives of the physician and his or her family. A description of physicians' stresses and adaptations would facilitate educational, personal, and . . .
doi_str_mv 10.1056/NEJM198202253060805
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Death
Denial (Psychology)
Emotions
Fear
Humans
Internal medicine
Internship and Residency
Internships
Marital stability
Medical practices
Medical students
Medicine
Pain
Patients
Patients - psychology
Physician Impairment
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Physicians - psychology
Quality of Health Care
Sex
Social Isolation
Society
Sociology
Stress
Stress, Psychological
Students
Students, Medical - psychology
title The Effects of Stress on Physicians and Their Medical Practice
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