Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • My Book
  • Careers
  • Podcast
  • Transcripts
  • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Burnout
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • All
  • Physician
  • Burnout
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
    • All
    • Physician
    • Burnout
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • My Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Transcripts
    • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Burnout
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
    • All
    • Physician
    • Burnout
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • My Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Transcripts
    • Speaking
  • About Kevin Pho, MD, Founder of KevinMD
  • Be heard on social media’s leading physician voice
  • Contact Kevin
  • Custom enhanced author page pricing
  • DMCA Policy
  • Establishing, Managing, and Protecting Your Online Reputation: A Social Media Guide for Physicians and Medical Practices
  • KevinMD influencer opportunities
  • Opinion and commentary by KevinMD
  • Physician burnout speakers to keynote your conference
  • Physician Coaching by KevinMD
  • Physician keynote speaker: Kevin Pho, MD
  • Physician Speaking by KevinMD: a boutique speakers bureau
  • Primary care physician in Nashua, NH | Kevin Pho, MD
  • Privacy Policy
  • Recommended services by KevinMD
  • Subscribe to the newsletter
  • Terms of Use Agreement
  • Thank you for subscribing to KevinMD
  • Thank you for upgrading to the KevinMD enhanced author page
  • Upgrade to the KevinMD enhanced author page

Create a new medical reality

Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA
Physician
December 11, 2021
Share
Tweet
Share

I am an avid medical blogger. Without a doubt, the most common theme I’ve encountered during the past several years is embodied in the following op-ed: “We must help physicians at the brink of burnout, depression, and high stress,” followed by: “Health care has crossed into a realm of moral injury and systemic collapse.”

I tackled the second essay first. I wrote a no-holds-barred response to a physician posting anonymously. He seemed to be deflated (defeated?) over the realization that our health care profession and system are collapsing.

The physician asked: “What if the ongoing hemorrhaging that is happening in hospitals and clinics across the country doesn’t stop? What if there is no one left to stop the bleeding because we all have left the building, literally or figuratively?” I replied emphatically: “Get out of the spiral deathtrap now, while you can, relatively emotionally intact (I presume) before you become a statistic — either by suicide (God forbid) or one of the 500,000+ health care workers who have left medicine since the beginning of the pandemic.”

My advice notwithstanding, I bet when the “hemorrhaging” stops, some physicians will still be in the building. We are a highly resilient group, extremely dedicated, sometimes unfazed by the broken health care system. Some of us specialize in areas that have minimal interaction with the system’s broken parts.

However, hospitalists, intensivists, ER docs, and PCPs are on the front line of care; their well-being will always be in question. I suggested that the aforementioned physician find a job with a better work-life balance, even if it means subjugating his passion for medicine for a 9-to-5 job. After all, medicine is just a job — nothing more — run by the suits at the expense of doctors. Maybe the physician should seek employment in industry, e.g., pharma, health insurance or government. I closed my remarks by encouraging this anonymous physician to speak out against his employer and attach his name to his opinions. The fear of retaliation should not silence good doctors.

I discussed my blogging activities with my daughter, a newly minted family medicine physician. She thought I was wasting my time, because she believed physicians create their own hardships; their problems are self-imposed, she told me. Nevertheless, I responded to the authors of the other op-ed. I wrote that our choices of a career in medicine are virtually unlimited, and there is no reason to stay in a job that is intolerable. Leave before burnout and other forms of emotional exhaustion set in, I recommended. Create a new reality rather than try and change the existing one.

My comments have deep roots in psychological experiments I read about in college. The first experiments were conducted by the physiologist Walter Cannon in the 1920s. He was the individual who described the fight-or-flight response. Cannon realized that a chain of rapidly occurring reactions inside the body helped to mobilize its resources to deal with threatening circumstances.

The term “fight-or-flight” represents the choices that our ancestors had when faced with danger in their environment. Many physicians facing this situation today, however, neither fight nor flee. They seem to be frozen at work, paralyzed by fear. They accept whatever comes down the pike, whatever the powers-that-be hand to them, like an obedient dog, which brings me to the second series of experiments.

The studies were conducted in the 1960s and 1970s by the psychologist Martin Seligman. He showed that dogs subjected to painful shocks made no attempts to avoid them when given the chance, e.g., by jumping over a barrier. Research on what is now known as “learned helplessness” has shown that when people feel like they have no control over what happens, they tend to simply give up and accept their fate. This maladaptive passivity is highly evident in physicians who feel trapped at work and see no future in practicing medicine. The condition of learned helplessness has become a model for major depression, and it can also explain burnout.

I was fortunate to have trained 40 years ago, when practicing medicine was not dominated by business concerns and electronic medical records and when most physicians worked autonomously and were self-employed. It seems we have crossed a chasm now — health systems employ the majority of physicians — and there is no changing the landscape, no going back. We protest, but because the medical profession is (and has been) engaged in an internecine war, there is no uniting force to change the present-day circumstances encumbering medical practice. We cannot declare force majeure for events that are foreseeable. This is the reality we are stuck with, and it is unlikely to improve.

But all is not hopeless. Here are two things to remember. First, Seligman became curious why some individuals did not feel helpless even when hardened by their natural environment. He eventually focused his research on optimism and positive psychology. The aim of positive psychology is to begin to catalyze a change from a preoccupation with repairing the worst things in life to weathering them through optimistic thinking. There is no reason, Seligman believed, that people can’t learn to be optimistic – an outlook we begin to cultivate by challenging and changing our automatic negative thoughts.

Second, I’d like to remind younger physicians who feel helpless and hopeless that even in my era, although practicing medicine may have been more enjoyable, many of my colleagues and I tried out different jobs to obtain the best fit. I actually spent half my career working in non-clinical positions. There were no chains on us then or now. I considered myself a free agent. I called my own shots. I worked on my own terms. When someone or some force changed those terms to my disliking, I went elsewhere. The guiding principle throughout my career has been to act as a “company of one” – the CEO of my own career. My core competencies report to me, and I report to my board of mentors. That is the only reality that matters.

Arthur Lazarus is a former Doximity Fellow, a member of the editorial board of the American Association for Physician Leadership, and an adjunct professor of psychiatry at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. His forthcoming book is titled Every Story Counts: Exploring Contemporary Practice Through Narrative Medicine.

Image credit: Shutterstock.com

Prev

Change is critical to fulfilling our calling

December 10, 2021 Kevin 0
…
Next

Tired of the dying: Finding parallels in COVID-19 and HIV

December 11, 2021 Kevin 0
…

Tagged as: Practice Management

< Previous Post
Change is critical to fulfilling our calling
Next Post >
Tired of the dying: Finding parallels in COVID-19 and HIV

ADVERTISEMENT

More by Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA

  • AI in medical education needs to read widely

    Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA
  • Patients are turning to AI because doctors lack time

    Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA
  • Why diversity in medicine is a clinical intervention

    Arthur Lazarus, MD, MBA

Related Posts

  • Digital advances in the medical aid in dying movement

    Jennifer Lynn
  • A medical student’s physician inspiration

    Uju Momah
  • How the COVID-19 pandemic highlights the need for social media training in medical education 

    Oscar Chen, Sera Choi, and Clara Seong
  • Why this physician teaches first-year medical students 

    Mark Kelley, MD
  • Why a gap year will make this medical student a better physician

    Yoo Jung Kim, MD
  • Why this physician teaches health policy in medical school

    Kenneth Lin, MD

More in Physician

  • Why resident mistreatment puts patient care at risk

    Anonymous
  • Wealth inequality is a clinical problem, not political

    Sameen Farooq, MD
  • Professional identity in medicine has been hollowed out

    Ronald L. Lindsay, MD
  • Why is women’s mental health in psychiatry so overlooked?

    Jincy Rajan, MD
  • Why I say no during a cosmetic surgery consultation

    Richard V. Balikian, MD
  • The generalist physician hiding in every specialist

    Farid Sabet-Sharghi, MD
  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • The case for an AI-native health care platform

      Brian Hudes, MD | Health Technology
    • The collusion in discussing prognosis with cancer patients

      Kyle Edmonds, MD | Physician
    • Physician trust in leadership drives health care execution

      Dave Cummings, RN | Conditions and Diseases
    • Has higher education in India kept its promise?

      Rao M. Uppu, PhD | Medical Education
    • From Pakistan to Indiana: climate change and patient health

      Umayr R. Shaikh, MPH | Health Policy
    • 10 ways to keep women physicians from leaving

      Dawn Sears, MD | Physician
  • Past 6 Months

    • The MCAT requirement persists as a norm, not as a tool

      Aniruth Ananthanarayanan | Medical Education
    • Polycystic ovary syndrome is more than ovarian

      Oluyemisi Famuyiwa, MD | Conditions and Diseases
    • DEA fear is reshaping how doctors prescribe

      Ronald L. Lindsay, MD | Physician
    • Anesthesiologist bedside manner matters more than skill

      Britney Bowling, MD | Physician
    • Wearable technology saves lives through early detection

      Sidney J. Winawer, MD | Conditions and Diseases
    • The residency personal statement is an identity problem

      Kathleen Muldoon, PhD | Medical Education
  • Recent Posts

    • Dark money is writing your health care laws [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • How anchoring bias in medicine missed a heart attack

      Dr. Ahmed Azab | Conditions and Diseases
    • Why a Hulu comedy’s food allergy myths are dangerous

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions and Diseases
    • Why frontline health care workers get no mental support

      Jeremy Heffner, MD | Patient
    • The physician financial literacy gap nobody addresses

      David Schiettecatte, MD | Physician Finance
    • A physician’s involuntary psychiatric hold, from inside

      Ravi S. Aysola, MD | Conditions and Diseases

Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!

Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.


Find jobs at
Careers by KevinMD.com

Search thousands of physician, PA, NP, and CRNA jobs now.

Learn more

Leave a Comment

Founded in 2004 by Kevin Pho, MD, KevinMD.com is the web’s leading platform where physicians, advanced practitioners, nurses, medical students, and patients share their insight and tell their stories.

Social

  • Like on Facebook
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Connect on Linkedin
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT

  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • The case for an AI-native health care platform

      Brian Hudes, MD | Health Technology
    • The collusion in discussing prognosis with cancer patients

      Kyle Edmonds, MD | Physician
    • Physician trust in leadership drives health care execution

      Dave Cummings, RN | Conditions and Diseases
    • Has higher education in India kept its promise?

      Rao M. Uppu, PhD | Medical Education
    • From Pakistan to Indiana: climate change and patient health

      Umayr R. Shaikh, MPH | Health Policy
    • 10 ways to keep women physicians from leaving

      Dawn Sears, MD | Physician
  • Past 6 Months

    • The MCAT requirement persists as a norm, not as a tool

      Aniruth Ananthanarayanan | Medical Education
    • Polycystic ovary syndrome is more than ovarian

      Oluyemisi Famuyiwa, MD | Conditions and Diseases
    • DEA fear is reshaping how doctors prescribe

      Ronald L. Lindsay, MD | Physician
    • Anesthesiologist bedside manner matters more than skill

      Britney Bowling, MD | Physician
    • Wearable technology saves lives through early detection

      Sidney J. Winawer, MD | Conditions and Diseases
    • The residency personal statement is an identity problem

      Kathleen Muldoon, PhD | Medical Education
  • Recent Posts

    • Dark money is writing your health care laws [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • How anchoring bias in medicine missed a heart attack

      Dr. Ahmed Azab | Conditions and Diseases
    • Why a Hulu comedy’s food allergy myths are dangerous

      Lianne Mandelbaum, PT | Conditions and Diseases
    • Why frontline health care workers get no mental support

      Jeremy Heffner, MD | Patient
    • The physician financial literacy gap nobody addresses

      David Schiettecatte, MD | Physician Finance
    • A physician’s involuntary psychiatric hold, from inside

      Ravi S. Aysola, MD | Conditions and Diseases

MedPage Today Professional

An Everyday Health Property Medpage Today

Copyright © 2026 KevinMD.com | Powered by Astra WordPress Theme

  • Terms of Use | Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
All Content © KevinMD, LLC
Site by Outthink Group

Leave a Comment

Comments are moderated before they are published. Please read the comment policy.

Loading Comments...