Calling: Never seen before or heard of – A survey among Swiss physicians

Author:

Laura Simões Morgado1,Friedrich Stiefel2,Mehdi Gholam3,Céline Bourquin2

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, Lausanne University, Lausanne, Switzerland

2. Psychiatric Liaison Service, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

3. Center for Psychiatric Epidemiology and Psychopathology, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Research is needed to gain a deeper understanding of what motivates physicians to do their work and what keeps them in the profession. OBJECTIVES: To explore calling as an approach to work in a sample of physicians. METHODS: We designed an online survey addressing career choice and career calling among physicians in French-speaking Switzerland, and measured associations between calling and categorical variables (participant characteristics, motivations for choosing medicine, career choice(s) and consistency, and definition of calling). RESULTS: The majority of physicians (n = 229) reported that a calling was not a career motivator. The main reasons for becoming a physician were to be useful (n = 173), the scientific aspects of medicine (n = 168), and altruism (n = 153). Viewing medicine as a calling was significantly associated with having been attracted specifically and only to the medical career and stability of this career choice. Physicians defined a calling as internal summons (n = 140), passion (n = 126), and sense of purpose in life (n = 101). Being in the right place, internal summons, and passion were significantly more often considered as a definition for calling by physicians with a calling. CONCLUSIONS: A sense of calling influences career choice and professional stability, and might play a protective role in exhaustion or dissatisfaction at work.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Rehabilitation

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