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Published in: Perspectives on Medical Education 1/2017

Open Access 01-02-2017 | Original Article

Medical student resilience strategies: A content analysis of medical students’ portfolios

Authors: Richard A. Prayson, S. Beth Bierer, Elaine F. Dannefer

Published in: Perspectives on Medical Education | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Introduction

Stress and burnout among medical students is a well-recognized concern. A student’s ability to employ resilience strategies to self-regulate behaviour is critical to the student’s future career as a physician.

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed a sampling of year 1, 2 and 5 portfolio essays focused on the Personal Development competency and performance milestones, written by 49 students from three different classes in a 5-year programme devoted to training physician investigators. Two medical educators used a framework established by Jensen and colleagues (2008) to identify the nature and prevalence of various resilience strategies (valuing the physician role, self-awareness, personal arena, professional arena, professional support and personal support) medical students reported in portfolio essays.

Results

All students documented at least one strategy in their essays each year. In all years, the most commonly documented strategies were in the personal arena (95.7% of year 1, 98% of year 2 and 87.8% of year 5 portfolios). The least frequently documented strategy in all years was professional support (42.8% of year 1, 38.8% of year 2, and 28.6% of year 5 portfolios). Year 5 portfolios discussed personal support strategies (79.6%) more frequently than year 1 (53.1%) and year 2 (59.2%) portfolios.

Discussion

The results suggest that medical students can identify stressors and articulate resilience strategies that can be employed to potentially address them.
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Metadata
Title
Medical student resilience strategies: A content analysis of medical students’ portfolios
Authors
Richard A. Prayson
S. Beth Bierer
Elaine F. Dannefer
Publication date
01-02-2017
Publisher
Bohn Stafleu van Loghum
Published in
Perspectives on Medical Education / Issue 1/2017
Print ISSN: 2212-2761
Electronic ISSN: 2212-277X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40037-016-0313-1

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