Defensiveness
Defensiveness is a psychological and behavioral reaction triggered by perceived criticism, blame, or threat. In clinical settings like neurosurgery, it often emerges during feedback, evaluation, or high-pressure situations, and can hinder learning, teamwork, and safety.
🔹 Definition
Defensiveness involves:
- Rejecting or minimizing feedback
- Justifying one's actions instead of listening
- Shifting blame or becoming argumentative
- Emotional withdrawal or visible discomfort
“Defensiveness is the instinct to protect the ego, even when the intellect knows better.”
🔹 Examples in Neurosurgical Context
- A resident interrupts feedback with:
“But that’s not how I usually do it…”
- A scrub nurse responds to a suggestion with:
“I didn’t make a mistake—the instruments were miscounted.”
- A consultant becomes visibly irritated when a junior questions a surgical plan.
🔹 Root Causes
- Fear of failure or shame
- High-pressure or judgmental environments
- Poor past experiences with feedback
- Lack of psychological safety
- Cultural or hierarchical barriers
🔹 Consequences
- Obstructed feedback loops
- Breakdown of team communication
- Lost opportunities for reflection and improvement
- Erosion of trust
🔹 Strategies to Reduce Defensiveness
✅ As Feedback Giver
- Focus on actions, not personality
- Offer support alongside critique
- Create a respectful, non-punitive tone
✅ As Feedback Receiver
- Pause before responding
- Ask clarifying questions:
“Can you help me understand how that impacted the team?”
- Reflect before reacting
- Acknowledge the feedback:
“I see your point—I’ll work on that.”
🔹 Quote
“Defensiveness blocks feedback. Openness transforms it into growth.”