Anticipated shame and professional identity formation

Q4 Medicine
P. Lusk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Developing a professional identity in physicians-in-training is a central, but contested, outcome of medical education. In recent years scholars have argued for the importance of including affective experiences, especially shame, in the discourse around medical training. This discourse reflects projection and anticipation around both shame and professional identity, and the question of how shame impacts the latter is critical. Shame is an affect that arises when the self is confronted by the gaze, judgment or awareness of an Other; it can have profound impacts on identity and self-concept, and is highly prevalent in medicine and healthcare. This article posits ‘anticipated shame’ as a potent factor implicit in the experience of developing a medical professional identity, and connects shame to stigma and marginalization in medical training. Shame, and the anticipation of shame in student–teacher and trainee–patient interactions, highlights aspects of interpersonal communication within medical training and then practice. The concept of anticipated shame offers rich ground to theorize the effects of affect in medical education, and how trainees internalize medical cultural values and then enter the field of clinical practice.
预期羞耻与职业身份形成
培养培训医师的职业身份是医学教育的核心,但也有争议。近年来,学者们一直认为,在医学培训的讨论中,包括情感体验,尤其是羞耻,是很重要的。这种话语反映了围绕羞耻和职业身份的投射和预期,羞耻如何影响后者的问题至关重要。羞耻感是当自我面对他人的注视、评判或意识时产生的一种情绪;它可以对身份和自我概念产生深远的影响,并且在医学和医疗保健中非常普遍。这篇文章假设“预期羞耻感”是一个潜在的因素,隐含在发展医学专业身份的经历中,并将羞耻感与医学培训中的耻辱和边缘化联系起来。羞耻感,以及在学生与老师和实习生与病人的互动中对羞耻感的预期,突出了医学培训和实践中人际沟通的各个方面。预期羞耻的概念为情感在医学教育中的作用提供了丰富的理论依据,也为学员如何内化医学文化价值观进而进入临床实践领域提供了理论依据。
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来源期刊
Communication and Medicine
Communication and Medicine Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Communication & Medicine continues to abide by the following distinctive aims: • To consolidate different traditions of discourse and communication research in its commitment to an understanding of psychosocial, cultural and ethical aspects of healthcare in contemporary societies. • To cover the different specialities within medicine and allied healthcare studies. • To underscore the significance of specific areas and themes by bringing out special issues from time to time. • To be fully committed to publishing evidence-based, data-driven original studies with practical application and relevance as key guiding principles.
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