Listening to the Grief Stories of Medical Students

Listening to the Grief Stories of Medical Students

By Johanna Shapiro, PhD

Other emotions seem easier to acknowledge – stress resulting from the burdens of constant studying, examinations, and evaluations; moral outrage and righteous anger at institutional and societal injustices; anxiety and depression arising from “imposter syndrome,” the sense that one doesn’t belong, isn’t good enough to be in medical school. But how does grief factor in?

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Medical Students Are Patients Too: An Interview with Therapist Darrell Phillips, LCSW, MBA

Medical Students Are Patients Too: An Interview with Therapist Darrell Phillips, LCSW, MBA

By Darrell Phillips, Kortni Ferguson, and Priya Roy

And it’s an active exercise to remind yourself of who you are and what you value. Sometimes you have to check in with yourself and ask: What are my values when it comes to being a physician? And do I have to be the physician who discovers the next big thing? Or is it okay to say, “I want to be a physician, and that’s enough. I don’t have to be Physician of the Year.”

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Neighboring: Making Connections Where You Are

Neighboring: Making Connections Where You Are

By Theora Kvitka and Catherine Oldershaw

Our intention with the exhibit was not to gloss over the challenges that come with the reality of being a neighbor. Beyond just interacting with each other, maybe what people need is to evolve their notion of “neighbor” beyond just positive idealism to the complex nature of these relationships: good or bad, weak or familial, dependent or isolated.  

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