New doctors at high risk of depression-Study
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Washington: More than one in four doctors in the early stages of their careers have signs of depression, said a study.
The study claimed the gruelling years of training for a medical job are to blame.
That's bad news not just for the young doctors themselves, but also for the patients they care for as depressed doctors are more likely to make mistakes or give worse care, Xinhua cited the study as saying.
The findings, published in the US journal JAMA, came from an investigation of 50 years' studies that looked for depression symptoms in more than 17,500 resident physicians, also known as doctors in training.
By collecting and combining data from 54 studies done around the world between 1963 and 2015, researchers from the Harvard University and the University of Michigan concluded that 28.8 percent of physicians in training have signs of depression.
The study claimed the gruelling years of training for a medical job are to blame.
That's bad news not just for the young doctors themselves, but also for the patients they care for as depressed doctors are more likely to make mistakes or give worse care, Xinhua cited the study as saying.
The findings, published in the US journal JAMA, came from an investigation of 50 years' studies that looked for depression symptoms in more than 17,500 resident physicians, also known as doctors in training.
By collecting and combining data from 54 studies done around the world between 1963 and 2015, researchers from the Harvard University and the University of Michigan concluded that 28.8 percent of physicians in training have signs of depression.
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