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How To Avoid The Radiology Comparison Culture (Don’t Become A Victim!)

comparison culture

Type A personalities, typical graduates from medical schools, tend to compare themselves to others in their residency classes. These residents often ask the following questions: Am I performing better than everyone else on the in-service examinations? Do I read films as fast as everyone else? Have I written more papers than my colleagues? These questions asking how you perform relative to your colleagues make up what I call comparison culture.

Do you further your career by joining the comparison culture and comparing yourself in this way to others? Sure, it can stimulate some friendly (or unfriendly!) competition. You can work hard to make sure your in-service score beats all others. And yes, you can write your umpteenth paper to shove it in your colleague’s face. But, these motivations only improve metrics that do not correlate with qualities that make a better radiologist, such as the desire to learn continually. And over the long term, a resident cannot sustain these motivations. I mean, who wants to study for the sake of getting a higher in-service score year in and year out? It’s a recipe for misery and burnout.

So, what motivations should we seek to make ourselves better radiologists who love our chosen profession? Let’s go through some long-term motivators to avoid the pitfalls of the comparison culture.

Love Learning

After years of testing and the comparison culture, many students forget or never learn what it is like to enjoy learning. When I read, I do it because reading helps me in some way with my practice or because a specific topic interests me. Reading and studying should not be about getting one up on our colleagues. Instead, understanding is a reward in and of itself.

Solve Great Questions

Nothing is more rewarding than solving that bizarre case or coming up with a twist that leads the clinicians to take a different direction than they had initially expected. Call me crazy, but there is something special about being that “go-to” person when anyone has a problem that needs to be solved. And solving interesting questions begets more interesting questions from your fellow clinicians.

Work To Improve Patient Care

For many radiologists, the ultimate satisfaction comes from improving our patients’ lives. Even though many of us are in the background, we can feel the difference we make when clinicians treat patients appropriately because of our calls, improving patients’ lives. Many of us derive immense joy from the vital work we perform.

Embrace The Excitement Of New Technologies

Many of us, as radiologists, went into the field because we like more significant and sophisticated toys. Whether it’s that new SPECT-CT or the latest and greatest 7T MRI, we should derive pleasure from learning these technologies’ significance and applying them to patient care. It pays to keep a youthful spirit and keep our eyes wide open in amazement as we conquer the next great technology for the betterment of others. Heck, we can even make a career out of it!

Enjoy Playing Part Of A Team

And finally, many of us enjoy our roles in forming a team and operating flawlessly as a unit. Only through interaction among team members that we come up with our best ideas and perform to our fullest. Working by yourself limits us to boundaries instead of expanding our knowledge. Playing a role in a team defeats the hazards of the radiology comparison culture.

Avoid The Comparison Culture

Ultimately, the comparison culture only gives radiologists and trainees a short-term benefit. Instead, loving to learn, solving our colleagues’ clinical dilemmas, embracing new technologies, and playing an essential role in a team can help us derive long-term happiness from our work. Avoid the comparison culture to love what you do. Radiology is a marathon, not a sprint.