In this life.
If you want to live long, you need to be wicked.
Especially to your juniors if you're a medical elder.
If you're too nice, how do you shift a lot of work on your juniors head and get to leave work early?
Abeg be wicked ooh.
Medicine has always attracted perfectionists. The problem is that the kind of perfectionism increasingly common among young adults today may be exactly the kind physicians can least afford.
A new meta-analysis published in Psychological Bulletin found that while perfectionism among college students has risen substantially since the 1980s, the sharpest increases came in what researchers call “perfectionistic concerns”: a fear-driven orientation centered on anxiety about mistakes, failure, and others’ critical judgment.
Researchers say this shift matters for medicine, a field that has long rewarded diligence, precision, and exceptionally high personal standards. But when perfectionism is driven more by fear of failure than by the pursuit of excellence, it may undermine learning, decision-making, and potentially even patient care. https://t.co/pJmPwi6inc