Who Does What in Medicine?
By Suzanne Brue
The relationship between type and career choice has been studied more intensively in medicine than in any other occupation. Isabel Myers had a keen interest in the field of medicine and in helping medical students develop their potential, for their own sake and that of their patients. She used an early form of the Indicator in the relatively unknown Myers Longitudinal Medical Study* of 5355 medical students from 45 medical schools.
These medical students were given the Indicator in the early 1950's by Isabel Myers and followed up twice afterwards in the 60¹s and the 70¹s by Myers and Mary McCaulley. The project was designed to see whether type could predict or explain individual differences in medical school selection, interests, aptitude, learning styles, specialty choice, and practice settings.
Recently researchers at the University of Connecticut and Louisiana State University* updated this information with data on doctors graduating between 1983 and 1995. The findings of all these studies have been consistent, with a few exceptions mentioned at the end of this article. Here are some of the
findings:
All types
are found in medicine, leading Myers to conclude that medicine
has appeal for - and gains strength from - all psychological
types. Although some aspect of medicine appeals to all types,
there are increasingly fewer SPs than other temperaments. Since
the 1950¹s the percentage of SPs in medicine has dropped from 22%
to about 10%, perhaps reflecting the increased
institutionalization and formalization of the medical world.
A
physician who changes specialties is far more likely to move into
a specialty in which the doctor¹s type is more prevalent than in
his or her initial choice. This supports a link between type and
the medical environment in which doctors feel most satisfied.
Choice of Specialty
Medical
specialties such as internal medicine and neurology attract more
IN types, while surgical specialties attract ES types.
Sensing
types with their interest in high tech and straightforward
approaches are more attracted to general and orthopedic surgery
and obstetrics/gynecology.
Intuitives'
preference for complex problems and subtle nuances makes
psychiatry attractive.
ISTPs and
ISFPs appear to be most attracted to monitoring jobs such as
anesthesiology. Extraverted SPs were less comfortable with the
extended attention span required by these
specialties.
INT types
are attracted to pathology and research due to their ability to
detach intellectually. They enjoy the challenge of medicine
without ever seeing a patient.
Pediatrics
appeals most to the warmhearted ESFJs and ISFJs. ENFJs and INFJs,
who enjoy nurturing intellectually rather than physically, choose
more often to teach in medical school.
Introverts
and feeling types are more likely to choose primary care, with
its nurturing role for the physician. Within primary care,
feeling types are more likely to choose family medicine.
Medical Environment
Sensing
types prefer a practice where they can use well-learned skills in
a daily round of familiar activities.
Intuitive
types prefer to practice where they encounter complex diagnostic
challenges or new breakthroughs.
Thinking
types prefer caring for patients where objectivity and toughness
are required. This is particularly true for surgery where there
is little continuity with patients over time and the decision-making
process favors thinking.
Feeling
types prefer caring for patients where nurturing and compassion
are primary requirements. In primary care, which attracts feeling
types and introverts, there is a satisfying long-term
relationship with patients and families and a service orientation.
Recent Study
The 1983 - 1995 study found the following changes in types reported by medical students.
Judging
types have increased. This may reflect increased reliance on
technology and formal information rather than allowing the
physician to scan the possibilities informally. The increase in
judging types may also be related to the increased amount of
bureaucracy, paperwork, and the systems used in large practices
in medicine today.
Women, who
comprise 40% of medical students (compared to 6% in the 50¹s),
tend to choose primary care specialties more often, and family
medicine more often within primary care. This may reflect the
greater proportion of feeling types among women but also the
attraction of fewer years in residency and the ability to devote
time to their own families sooner.
*Information on these studies can be obtained from librarian Jamie Johnson at the Center for Applications of Psychological Type (CAPT) at johnson@capt.org or 1-800-777-CAPT.
Suzanne Brue, ENFJ, is a former premedical advisor at the University of Vermont and a private consultant in the use of the MBTI in medical
education. She can be reached at (802) 862 2859 or oakledge@together.net.