- Joined
- Jul 23, 2014
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I've heard of doctors developing a "God complex" (inflated egos, thinking they know best, etc.) and it seems easy to see how that happens. There is a recent ongoing thread about how it can be offensive when people assume you are a nurse, not a doctor, and why it is wrong for NP's to call themselves doctors. To be clear, I'm not arguing for or against those arguments.
I am wondering how we, as physicians, can walk that line between being the leader of a healthcare team and take ownership of our extensive training, without looking down upon other health-care workers (nurses, NP's, PA's, etc.) for their less complete understanding (even if they think they know better). Basically, after I am done my 7-9 years MD/PhD and 4-7 years residency+fellowship, how to I keep myself from turning into a pretentious jerk?
I am wondering how we, as physicians, can walk that line between being the leader of a healthcare team and take ownership of our extensive training, without looking down upon other health-care workers (nurses, NP's, PA's, etc.) for their less complete understanding (even if they think they know better). Basically, after I am done my 7-9 years MD/PhD and 4-7 years residency+fellowship, how to I keep myself from turning into a pretentious jerk?