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Breaking Down Grit: Persistency and Flexibility in the Career Plans of Military Medical Students.

Ryan R LandollKrista B HighlandKameha BellAnthony R ArtinoCol Lisa K MooresMichael SohSebastian UijtdehaageSteven J DurningNeil E GrunbergTing Dong
Published in: Military medicine (2023)
This study offers important insights into the relationship among well-being factors, grit, and long-term career planning in the military. The limitations of using a single-item measure of burnout and measuring behavioral intentions in a short time frame during undergraduate medical education highlight the importance of future longitudinal studies that can examine actual behaviors across a career lifespan. However, this study offers some key insights into potential impacts on the retention of military physicians. The findings suggest that military physicians who are most likely to stay in the military tend to embrace a more fluid and flexible medical specialty path. This is critical in expectation setting for the military to train and retain military physicians across a wide range of critical wartime specialties.
Keyphrases
  • medical students
  • posttraumatic stress disorder
  • primary care
  • medical education
  • healthcare
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment
  • health insurance
  • cross sectional