Medical student abuse. Incidence, severity, and significance
- 26 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 263 (4) , 527-532
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.263.4.527
Abstract
In a survey of the incidence, severity, and significance of medical student abuse as perceived by the student population of one major medical school, 46.4% of all respondents stated that they had been abused at some time while enrolled in medical school, with 80.6% of seniors reporting being abused by the senior year. More than two thirds (69.1%) of those abused reported that at least one of the episodes they experienced was of "major importance and very upsetting." Half (49.6%) of the students indicated that the most serious episodes of abuse affected them adversely for a month or more; 16.2% said that it would "always affect them." Students identified various types of abuse and proposed a number of measures for the prevention and management of abuse in medical school. We conclude that medical student abuse was perceived by these students to be a significant cause of stress and should be a major concern of those involved with medical student education.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Students' self-ratings of subjective stress across 30 months of medical schoolBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1987
- Gender differences in relationships and stress of medical and law studentsAcademic Medicine, 1986
- An examination of the relationships among interpersonal stress, morale and academic performance in male and female medical studentsSocial Science & Medicine, 1986