Medical Student Syndrome

During their medical education, students must learn syndromes or symptom lists of various rare and malevolent diseases. As they read about these diseases, students are susceptible to believing that they exhibit a symptom or sign associated with the disease. The more they dwell on their supposed symptoms and begin to research further, the more they become convinced that they truly have the disease.

Example

For example, the student reads about a brain tumor that is associated with a headache . If, by coincidence, the individual suffers from a headache, he or she may conclude they have a brain tumor. It is not limited to medical students; anyone who reads medical material is susceptible. However, it is most frequently observed in medical students.

A good metaphor of Medical Student Syndrome can be found in the following adage, which states:

"if a medical student hears hoof-beats outside the window they think it's a zebra" - in other words they conclude that the common sound is ascribable to the rarer beast.

As one continues in clinical medicine , the opposing adage: "common things occur commonly" becomes a more valuable motto.

The spread of the syndrome

This syndrome is becoming more common as people use the Internet and come to their doctors anxiously clutching various print-outs of rare disease symptoms, whereas probably all they have is something common and benign. It is part of the downside of the free and opulent information flow available on-line, especially where that information is either of dubious quality or is accessed by an amateur who cannot temper the information with a reasoned and informed opinion.

This is not to say they do not have the disease, but to make an ill-informed decision before consulting with a trained medical doctor can affect a patients mental health through unnecessary stress and worry

Common Sightings

What are some of the common Medical Student Syndrome sightings?