Keeping doctors happy and productive requires a thorough understanding of the systemic causes and consequences of physician stress, as well as the role of resilience in maintaining a healthy mental state. The pressure of making life-or-death decisions along with those associated with the day-to-day challenges of doctoring can lead to poor patient care and communication, patient dissatisfaction, absenteeism, reductions in productivity, job dissatisfaction, and lowered retention.This edited volume will provide a comprehensive tool for understanding and promoting physician stress resilience. Specifically, the book has six interrelated objectives that, collectively, would advance the evidence-based understanding of (1) the extent to which physicians experience and suffer from work-related stress; (2) the various manifestations, syndromes, and reaction patterns directly caused by work-related stress; (3) the degree to which physicians are resilient in that they aresuccessful or not successful in coping with these stressors; (4) the theories and direct evidence that account for the resilience; (5) the programs during and following medical school which help to promote resilience; and (6) the agenda for future theory, research, and intervention efforts for the nextgeneration of physicians.
Section One Introduction to the Stress of Being a Medical Student; Chapter 1. Distributed emotional intelligence: A resource to help medical students learn in stressful settings; Chapter 2. First clinical attachments: informal learning and stressors in the clinical environment; Chapter 3. Between two worlds: medical students narrating identity tensions; Chapter 4. Laughter for coping: medical students narrating professionalism dilemmas; Chapter 5. Bringing complexity thinking to curriculum development: Implications for faculty and medical student stress and resilience; Section Two Introduction to the Stress of Being A Physician; Chapter 6. Maintaining a balance: doctors caring for people who are dying and their families; Chapter 7. Physician Stress: Compassion Satisfaction, Compassion Fatigue and Vicarious Traumatization; Chapter 8. The Medico-Legal Environment, and How Medico-Legal Matters Impact on the Doctor: Research Findings from an Australian Study; Chapter 9: How Doctors Become Patients; Chapter 10. The Impaired Physician; Chapter 11. Healthy Docs = Healthy Patients: arguably the most important reason to care about physician health; Section 3 Introduction to Management of Physician Stress; Chapter 12. Overcopers: Medical Doctor Vulnerability to Compassion Fatigue; Chapter 13. Stress and Coping Generational and Gender Similarities and Differences; Chapter 14. Treatment and Prevention Work: Center for Practitioner Renewal; Chapter 15: Promoting resilience and posttraumatic growth in physicians; Chapter 16. Ethical Decisions: Stress and Distress in Medicine; Section 4 Introduction to Personal Reflections; Chapter 17. Surgery; Chapter 18. The gifts of palliative care: sometimes awkward always wholesome; Chapter 19. Pediatrics: If Only it was Just the Kids; Chapter 20. Psychiatrists in Distress: When Work Becomes A Problem; Chapter 21. Medical Students and Residents; Chapter 22. Family Medicine: I will never fly in a helicopter again; Chapter 23. Anesthesiology: Personal Reflections; Chapter 24. Emergency Medicine; Chapter 25. Conclusions;
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