Implementation of dedicated social worker coaching for emergency medicine residents ‐ Lessons learned

Author:

Buchanan Jennie A.12ORCID,Meadows Sarah1,Whitehead Jason1,Sungar W. Gannon12,Angerhofer Christy3,Nussbaum Abraham1,Blok Barbara2,Guth Todd2,Bakes Katherine4,Millner Malorie5,Salazar Lavonne1,Stephens Megan1,Kaplan Bonnie12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine & Office of Graduate Medical Education Denver Denver Health & Hospital Authority Denver Colorado USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Aurora University of Colorado Denver Colorado USA

3. Health Equity in Action Program Manager & Service Learning Administrator Vice Chancellors Office for DEI & Community Engagement Aurora University of Colorado Denver Colorado USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine Aurora Veterans Administration Aurora Colorado USA

5. Department of Family Medicine Denver Saint Joseph Medical Center Denver Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractEmergency medicine training is associated with high levels of stress and burnout, which were exacerbated by the COVID‐19 pandemic. The pandemic further exposed a mismatch between trainees' mental health needs and timely support services; therefore, the objective of our innovation was to create an opportunity for residents to access a social worker who could provide consistent coaching. The residency leadership team partnered with our graduate medical education (GME) office to identify a clinical social worker and professionally‐trained coach to lead sessions. The project was budgeted at an initial cost of $15,000 over 1 year. Residents participated in 49 group and 73 individual sessions. Post implementation in 2021, we compared this intervention to all other wellness initiatives. Resident response rate was 80.88% (n = 55/68) and median interquartile range (IQR) score of the initiative was 2 (1 = detrimental and 4 = beneficial) versus 3.79 (3.69–3.88) the median IQR of all wellness initiatives. A notable number, 22%, rated the program as detrimental, which could be related to summary comments regarding ability to attend sessions, lack of session structure, loss of personal/educational time, and capacity of the social worker to relate with them. Summary comments also revealed the innovation was useful, with individual sessions preferred to group sessions. Application of a social worker coaching program in an emergency medicine residency program appears to be a feasible novel intervention. Lessons learned after implementation include the importance of recruiting someone with emergency department/GME experience, orienting them to culture before implementation and framing coaching as an integrated residency resource.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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