Behind the Confidence of Psychiatry
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By
February 3, 2026
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2 min
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1
The study surveyed 160 psychiatrists in Turkey on burnout and adequacy feelings.
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2
Links found between burnout, compassion fatigue, and imposter phenomenon.
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3
Maladaptive perfectionism correlates with feelings of professional fraud.
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4
Female psychiatrists face higher levels of burnout and compassion fatigue.
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5
Imposter phenomenon reflects broader cultural and professional issues.
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6
Study emphasizes systemic contributors to these feelings.
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7
Caution due to cross-sectional design limiting causal inference.
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A recent study published in BMC Psychiatry highlights the connection between feelings of professional inadequacy among psychiatrists, burnout, compassion fatigue, and maladaptive perfectionism. Conducted with 160 psychiatrists in Turkey, the research revealed that higher levels of burnout and compassion fatigue were consistently linked to increased feelings of inadequacy, especially in female psychiatrists. The study emphasized that imposter phenomenon should be viewed in the context of systemic occupational stressors, rather than solely as an individual issue, and noted gender differences in experiences of compassion and perfectionism.
-
1
The study surveyed 160 psychiatrists in Turkey on burnout and adequacy feelings.
-
2
Links found between burnout, compassion fatigue, and imposter phenomenon.
-
3
Maladaptive perfectionism correlates with feelings of professional fraud.
-
4
Female psychiatrists face higher levels of burnout and compassion fatigue.
-
5
Imposter phenomenon reflects broader cultural and professional issues.
-
6
Study emphasizes systemic contributors to these feelings.
-
7
Caution due to cross-sectional design limiting causal inference.
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