Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Mistreatment by patients and families is linked to adverse patient outcomes and physician burnout, and particularly affects women and underrepresented in medicine (UIM) physicians. We sought to explore how this source of mistreatment affects trainee professional identity formation (PIF), a key process in the development of altruistic physicians.
METHODS: We conducted this multi-institutional qualitative study between May and October 2023 with semistructured interviews of pediatric residents. We used the constant comparative method consistent with modified grounded theory to analyze data through a lens of Cruess et al's model of PIF in medicine.
RESULTS: We interviewed 32 pediatric residents and identified 4 primary themes, which we used to develop a conceptual model. 1) Residents identify patient- and family-centered care as core to their professional identity, while acknowledging their vulnerability to mistreatment from patients and families. 2) Mistreatment threatens resident PIF through fractured patient-provider relationships, negative impacts on patient care, and decreased psychological safety of the learning environment. 3) Mistreatment that is frequent, unaddressed, and centered around personal traits is particularly damaging to PIF. 4) Residents employ various strategies to mitigate the negative impacts of mistreatment and ultimately deepen their professional identity.
CONCLUSIONS: Mistreatment from patients and families negatively affects pediatric residents' well-being, learning, and professional identity, with particular impacts on women and UIM residents. Our study informs ways that institutions can best structure support to navigate mistreatment while optimizing trainee learning and PIF, along with patient care.