Background
Personality has been defined as a collection of stable individual traits [
1] and behavioral, emotional and attitudinal response patterns. Within the research literature, personality is described using various approaches. For example, personality dimensions or traits include designations of extraversion, introversion, neuroticism, agreeableness, conscientiousness, perfectionism, obsessionality, and low self-esteem [
2],[
3]. Combinations of traits or personality types include categorizations of sensing, thinking, and judging types or impulsiveness and insecurity [
4],[
5]. Personality components include labeled behaviors such as harm avoidance, novelty seeking, and reward dependence [
6].
Personality research has been applied to the medical profession through the exploration of how certain features of physicians’ personalities relate to outcomes such as their career choice and patient care. For example, studies have documented trends in physicians’ personality types within particular medical specialties such as anesthesiology and emergency medicine [
7],[
8]. Emotional stability and extraversion in physicians have been shown to predict job satisfaction [
9]. In terms of patient care, certain personality traits affect the physician-patient relationship where, for example, physician openness and conscientiousness are linked to improved patient satisfaction [
10] and patient-centered communication [
11].
More generally, certain features of personality are often ascribed to physicians with, at times, conflicting inferences that relate to professional performance. For example, a driven, goal-oriented student is more likely to attain success in a medical career as these criteria are often used to judge admissibility to the profession. At the same time, the Type A personality frequently assigned to physicians holds many of the same attributes, but can be labeled undesirably as competitive, aggressive, or overachieving [
12]. Similarly, physicians are rewarded throughout their careers for the pursuit of excellence, yet their determination to attain the unreachable “perfection” may promote behaviors that are then admonished as work addiction, the need to control all aspects of their work, or obsessive compulsivity [
13]. The very nature of health care and medical professionalism may also reinforce this dissonance. Behaviors like conscientiousness, accessibility to patients, and the pursuit of excellence and lifelong learning are examples of the foundation tenets of medical professionalism [
14]. Maintaining these professional standards while setting boundaries to preserve wellness is challenging for all physicians. The extreme application and/or distorted interpretation of these professional expectations can threaten physician wellness, and physicians with certain personalities may be at risk.
The “physician personality” is considered one of the individual characteristics that contributes, along with professional and organizational factors, to physician wellness [
15]. Prior research has demonstrated how physicians’ personality traits are associated with their emotional wellness, where traits of neuroticism and conscientiousness are independent predictors of medical school stress for Norwegian medical students [
16]. Personality has also been shown to facilitate or constrain effective coping responses [
17] where extraversion and conscientiousness predicted greater use of problem-solving as a coping strategy. Certain personality traits such as compulsiveness put physicians at risk for burnout because of how they impact the individual’s response to workplace stressors [
18] and internal medicine residents’ self-reported disorganized personality style at the beginning of training has been shown to be associated with the prevalence of burnout after one year [
19]. The physician personality may also threaten the doctor’s physical health, where negative traits such as hostility have been linked to decreased survival, increased risk of developing cancer and coronary disease incidence [
20]-[
22].
Despite this body of literature, not much is known about whether or not physicians identify with certain personalities, if they perceive any link between these personalities and professional performance, and how they experience wellness when identifying with these personalities. During a qualitative study exploring the determinants of physician well-being, we noted that interviewed physicians frequently referred to themselves and to colleagues using three personality descriptions: workaholic, Type A and control freak [
23]. The following are illustrative sample quotes:
“At present, my major source of stress is related to sorting out details related to integrating a research component into my career. The specific generators of stress relate to funding needs, high expectations and work being judged, and the nebulous nature of research work that potentially has no limit, requiring a Type A person to set the limits, and surrounded by other Type A people in the same boat.”
“I believe my stresses have decreased with the duration of my career due to: 1) wisdom: learning not to sweat the small stuff and delegate work 2) financial stability 3) confidence: I don’t need to be the workaholic that society and I expected me to be when I started my career…”
“I think it is necessary to be partly obsessive-compulsive, perfectionistic and a control freak when dealing with something as important as people’s lives/health.”
“I think physicians as a group just like, you know, are all Type A personalities and kind of go, go, go…”
In the literature, the workaholic personality has been described as one demonstrating a compulsion or uncontrollable need to work incessantly [
24]; the Type A as one exhibiting competitiveness, perfectionism, anxiety, and high goal-orientation [
25], and the control freak as one displaying attempts to dictate how everything around them is done [
26]. To varying degrees, these personalities are also felt to be interlinked. For example, the anxious Type A personality emerges as a maladaptive coping response to deal with a high work stress environment; the control freak often exhibits perfectionism traits and Type A behaviors; and the workaholic frequently suffers from a form of obsessive compulsion or even addiction that helps mask anxiety [
24]-[
26]. These three personalities have also been linked to negative wellness outcomes. Workaholism has been identified as a risk factor for physician suicide [
27] and perfectionism, a component of the Type A and control freak personalities, has been shown to be a vulnerability factor for depression, anxiety, burnout, and suicide [
28]-[
30].
The goal of this paper is to examine the extent to which physicians in our study identified with the workaholic, Type A and control freak personalities. Given that physicians’ personalities have been associated, at times with dissonance, with aspects of patient care and physician wellness, we compare those physicians who identify with these personalities versus those who do not in terms of two outcomes: how they perceive the impact of personality on professional performance and how they experience wellness as measured by emotional exhaustion, depression, anxiety, mental health, job satisfaction, rewarding patient care, and career commitment.
Discussion
Most of the physicians in our study identified with at least one of the workaholic, Type A, and/or control freak personalities. The Type A personality was most frequently linked to being a better doctor, although participants who identified with any of the three personalities were more likely to believe that the particular personality enhanced professional performance. Wellness outcomes differed for physicians who identified with a particular personality compared to those who did not. Most strikingly, identifying with the workaholic personality was associated with only one potentially harmful and three positive wellness outcomes, while identifying with the control freak personality was associated with five potentially harmful and no positive wellness outcomes.
We anticipated that these three personalities would resonate with our survey participants to some degree given our previous qualitative work where physicians described themselves and their colleagues in this way [
23]. Our results may also reflect that individuals who choose a medical career possess personality traits associated with workaholic, Type A, and control freak personalities (e.g. ambitious, hard-working, obsessive-compulsive, perfectionistic). Prior research supports this notion in which, for example, low self-esteem was shown as a personality antecedent of burnout in physicians [
38], and internal medicine residents, compared with the general population, were more likely to have higher aspiration levels [
39]. Medical school admission criteria may also select directly or indirectly for certain personalities. One study demonstrated a positive association between extraversion and potential candidates’ multiple mini-interview performance and between extraversion/agreeableness and their acceptance offers [
40]. It is possible that other personality traits associated with the workaholic, Type A and control freak personalities are also linked to medical school admission (e.g., high-goal orientation, competitiveness). A further potential explanation of our study results is that of physicians’ indoctrination into the culture of medicine and stressful work environment as shaping their coping strategies towards the behaviors exhibited by those with workaholic, Type A [
12], and/or control freak personalities, or exposing and reinforcing the maladaptive aspects of the three personalities.
The physicians in our study linked physician personality to performance where the majority felt that being Type A makes one a better doctor and identifying with any of the three personalities was correlated with feeling it enhanced professional performance. To our knowledge, there is very little literature that explores this link. In a previous study of physician wellness, we explored physicians’ views of how their colleagues link their personal wellness to their ability to deliver quality health care. The interviewed physicians felt that despite an intellectual acknowledgment that wellness is associated with professional performance, two potential factors deterred physicians from recognizing signs of being unwell and caring for themselves: 1) the culture of medicine in which physicians are seen as invincible caregivers, highly committed to their patients, careers and sense of professionalism, and 2) physicians’ workloads, with external workplace pressures and the overwhelming nature of their work [
41]. These two powerful professional influences may create a similar dissonance for physicians thinking about how personality relates to performance. They may view aspects of the workaholic, Type A, and control freak personalities through the sometimes distorting lenses of the culture of medicine and their incessant workload. As examples, workaholism has been described as a “respectable addiction”, and an expression of career devotion [
42]. The Type A physician who is organized, proactive, and time efficient may be forgiven for his or her irritation and hostility by colleagues who appreciate his or her work effectiveness. The physician with a control freak personality may justify their extreme obsessiveness and need to have things done right as upholding professional cultural norms. Further research is needed to explore physicians’ perceptions of the link between personality and professional performance.
In addition, we found that wellness outcomes differed for participants who identified with the workaholic, Type A or control freak personalities versus those who did not. Prior research has shown that these personalities are associated with emotional exhaustion [
38],[
43],[
44]. There is also a proven association between burnout and long work hours [
15],[
45] - an occupational reality potentially aggravated by behaviors associated with the three personalities. In our study, identifying with the workaholic personality was associated with several positive wellness outcomes and further research could test these associations in a study designed to assess causality. It would also be important to explore if greater job satisfaction, rewarding patient experiences, and career commitment are drivers or consequences of identifying with the workaholic personality, and whether these perceived benefits are enough to counter the potential costs. Identifying with the control freak personality was associated with only negative wellness outcomes. Recall that physicians were also least likely to associate the control freak personality with improved performance. Future research might delve further into these insights.
Our results should be interpreted in light of the study design. This is a cross-sectional study in which physicians reported the extent to which they identified with certain personalities, rather than undergoing a formal personality assessment. Prior research supports that study participants are able to predict outcomes of personality testing [
46], thus the responses of the physicians in our study may have some degree of validity and at the very least reflect their self-perceptions. We also limited this study to three personalities, thus it is not possible for us to know how other personalities would be relevant to these particular outcomes. It is also feasible that the interpretation of the terms workaholic, Type A, and control freak might mean different things to different individuals. However, this choice was deliberately informed by our previous qualitative data where interviewed physicians described themselves and their colleagues using this wording. There may also be a response bias in that physicians who completed our survey may have been more or less interested in physician wellness which was the focus of the study. Additionally, the fact that there are no data to allow consideration of nonresponse bias is an important limitation, particularly in light of the 40% response rate. Also, only the emotional exhaustion domain of burnout was assessed as it appeared to be the best understood and critical in understanding the burnout process at the time. Future research could explore how the depersonalization domain of burnout might link to these personalities [
47]. Although this bivariate analysis has revealed some interesting findings, these concepts need to be explored more empirically. Such studies could expose how confounding factors such as race, career stage, gender and specialty may affect the associations between personality type and the two key outcomes discussed in this paper. Also important to note is that despite statistical significance, the absolute differences in wellness outcomes between those respondents who identified with a personality compared with those who did not were generally small and do not meet previously proposed criteria of half a standard deviation to denote clinical significance [
48]. Although hypothesis generating, these findings deserve further study to assess clinical relevance.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
Both JL and JW contributed to the conception and design of the study, acquisition of data and interpretation of data. JW was primarily responsible for data analysis. Both authors were involved in drafting the manuscript and revising it critically for important intellectual content and have given final approval of the version to be published.