Abstract

This Invited Commentary highlights the prevalence of adverse childhood experiences and the potential effect that such experiences can have in the medical education setting on trainees, colleagues, and faculty. The author draws on 20 years of experience working in organizations devoted to helping physicians with disruptive behavior learn new behavioral skills to enable them to function within the complex medical environment. A case example-an amalgam of individuals who have presented for remediation-is used to illustrate the issues that result from adverse childhood experiences. There is a broad and well-understood literature demonstrating a correlation between early life trauma and medical and mental health issues. Adverse early life experiences can also contribute to attachment-related difficulties including problems with boundaries, trust, and suspiciousness; lack of reciprocity; lack of attunement with others' emotional states; as well as regulation issues, including difficulties labeling and expressing feelings and internal states. Difficulties with self-concept, including a lack of continuous and predictable sense of self, low self-esteem, and shame and guilt, are also associated with exposure to adverse childhood experiences. Given the documented high proportion of health care workers, including physicians, who are trauma survivors, trauma-sensitive education must be a priority, not only in medical school but across the educational continuum.

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