Exploring constructions of female surgeons' intersecting identities and their impacts: a qualitative interview study with clinicians and patients in Ireland and Scotland

G Offiah, S Cable, S Schofield, CE Rees - Frontiers in Medicine, 2024 - frontiersin.org
Introduction While many studies have explored surgeons' personal and professional
identities separately, our study is the first to examine intersecting female surgical identities …

From magical thinking to suicide: Understanding emergency physicians' psychological struggle

KV Iserson - The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2024 - Elsevier
Recent literature has explored the psychological well-being of physicians, addressing
conditions like perfectionism, imposter phenomenon/syndrome (IP), depression, burnout …

Goals, Structure and Financing of Surgical Residency Training: A Subcommittee Report of the Blue Ribbon Committee II

ME Klingensmith, RM Minter, K Fisher, CD Berry… - Annals of …, 2024 - journals.lww.com
Objective: As part of the Blue Ribbon Committee II, review current goals, structure and
financing of surgical training in Graduate Medical Education (GME) and recommend needed …

“Everyone Here Is Smarter than Me”: Imposter Phenomenon among Indian Women Returning to Technology Careers after a Career Break

S Singh, S Vanka - Journal of International Women's Studies, 2024 - vc.bridgew.edu
Research on the imposter phenomenon (IP) is burgeoning. Most research, however, has
studied the role of personality factors, attitudinal disposition, and individual beliefs as a …

Medical Oncologists with Imposter Syndrome Suffer from Burnout

A Alkan, Ö Tanrıverdi - 2024 - researchsquare.com
Purpose Imposter Syndrome (IS) is defined as “the inability to internalize achievement and a
tendency to attribute success to external factors such as luck, error, or personal connections …

[引用][C] Fraudulent feelings: Imposter syndrome in surgery

JL Weaver - The American Journal of Surgery, 2024 - americanjournalofsurgery.com
The term “imposter syndrome” is used to describe an internal sense that one's success is
undeserved, despite objective evidence to the contrary. It was first described in 1978 by …