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Awhile ago we had some lectures about the "hidden curriculum" of the medical profession where physicians perpetuate an attitude where altruism is considered childish. It sort of becomes a coming of age, where medstudents feel like they need to look down on patients/altruism/the profession, in order to be considered someone who "gets it". I found the lectures really interesting and it completely aligns with things I've read on SDN. Nobody comes into medicine wanting to fall victim to the hidden curriculum, but sadly its happens to so many folks.
But what I find so interesting is that there are a subset of physicians who it doesn't seem to get to. If you look at the specialty forums here, on each forum there is always one or two attending who you can tell doesn't buy into it and still are overtly altruistic. These lectures were given by attendings of various specialties, so obviously there are MD's out there trying to stop the trend.
What do you think allows some people to stay above the "hidden curriculum"? What are you doing to try to prevent yourself from going down that road (assuming you think its a road you would rather not travel)?
Edit: If it wasn't obvious, the lectures were not endorsing the "hidden curriculum", they were warning us that it exists and hoping to encourage us to avoid its effects.
But what I find so interesting is that there are a subset of physicians who it doesn't seem to get to. If you look at the specialty forums here, on each forum there is always one or two attending who you can tell doesn't buy into it and still are overtly altruistic. These lectures were given by attendings of various specialties, so obviously there are MD's out there trying to stop the trend.
What do you think allows some people to stay above the "hidden curriculum"? What are you doing to try to prevent yourself from going down that road (assuming you think its a road you would rather not travel)?
Edit: If it wasn't obvious, the lectures were not endorsing the "hidden curriculum", they were warning us that it exists and hoping to encourage us to avoid its effects.
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