Implementation and Evaluation of a Comprehensive Resident Wellness Curriculum During the COVID-19 Pandemic

•Details a wellness curriculum with both resident- and faculty-led initiatives.•Resident-led activities overall were rated higher than faculty-led.•Scheduled time off was the highest rated activity to facilitate wellness.•No decreases in burnout measures were seen with this curriculum.•Systemic chan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of surgical education 2024-03, Vol.81 (3), p.397-403
Hauptverfasser: Seeland, Gianna R., Williams, Brinley M., Yadav, Menaka, Bowden, Emily, Antoniewicz, Leah W., Kilpatrick, Charlie C., Mastrobattista, Joan M., Ratan, Bani M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Details a wellness curriculum with both resident- and faculty-led initiatives.•Resident-led activities overall were rated higher than faculty-led.•Scheduled time off was the highest rated activity to facilitate wellness.•No decreases in burnout measures were seen with this curriculum.•Systemic change is likely needed to impact burnout measures for residents. To evaluate the effectiveness of resident-led and faculty-led initiatives for physician wellness after implementation of a resident wellness program. We initiated a wellness curriculum with both resident and faculty-led components in a large academic OB/GYN residency program in October 2020. The curriculum was created and evaluated using the Logic model. Residents were surveyed pre and 8 months postintervention with the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) and the Physician Well-Being Index (PWBI), with activity-related questions added to the second survey. Descriptive statistics, Mann-Whitney test, Chi-square test, and theme analysis were performed as appropriate. A large academic OB/GYN residency at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas All residents (n = 48) were invited to take part in the surveys. Response rate was 31/48 (65%) pre and 28/48 (58%) postintervention. Residents scored moderate for emotional exhaustion and depersonalization and high for personal accomplishment on both pre and post-MBI surveys. All indices of the PWBI improved over time; however, no significant differences were found in pre and postmeasures. Resident-led activities, which were alternated between individualized time off and group resident socialization, were rated significantly higher than faculty-led activities; 93% (52/56) of respondents rated resident-led activities in their top 2 most helpful initiatives compared to 7% (4/56) who rated faculty-led activities in their top 2 most helpful (p < 0.01) initiatives. Open-ended comments revealed that continued focus on wellness, attention to personal health, and systematic change were the most important ways to improve resident wellness. Decreases in burnout were not achieved over an 8-month period with program-level resident-led and faculty-led initiatives. Providing scheduled time for residents to use at their discretion and the continuation of events that encourage socialization are tools that are highest rated by residents to facilitate wellness.
ISSN:1931-7204
1878-7452
DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2023.11.014