鼓励我们的朋友提供一点帮助:住院医师倦怠和同伴交流课程。

Brenda Lovegrove Lepisto
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引用次数: 3

摘要

引言:住院医师的倦怠和抑郁率比非医师的增长更快。为了培养一个可以解决这些问题的支持性社区,可以对居民进行识别教育,并在一线支持其他居民的倦怠。文献中没有描述同伴角色扮演用于帮助有倦怠感的居民。方法:这项试点研究评估了旨在培养强大的情感和信息社会支持系统的教育组成部分。该课程利用同伴角色扮演来培养自我意识和社会支持,提高沟通技能,并教授现有的心理健康资源,从而鼓励干预。居民们列出了我们在现实生活中发展起来的倦怠和焦虑的行为表现。在体验式工作坊中,居民扮演“痛苦”和“帮助者”居民,并练习沟通同理心。为了解决心理健康污名化问题,所有人都被要求练习表达痛苦和寻求帮助。居民完成了角色扮演前问卷、课程满意度问卷和反思文章。结果:42名内科和过渡年住院医师(69%为男性,93%为国际医学毕业生)全部参与。住院医生报告说,舒适度、能力、信心和知识都有所提高,对代表安全氛围的临床教学环境的积极评价也有所提高。超过25%的文章引用了六个主题:沟通技巧知识、接近策略或策略知识、医院资源知识、帮助同事的承诺、倦怠的重要性,以及相信这种培训能更好地了解自己。结论:作为住院医生痛苦的第一见证者,同龄人在倦怠和心理健康干预中发挥着未被充分利用但至关重要的预防和支持作用,尤其是在冠状病毒大流行等共同危机时期。根据个人经历创作角色扮演有助于对倦怠和烦躁情绪进行有意义的讨论。角色扮演提供了一种低成本、有效的方法来消除污名化,鼓励讨论倦怠,对体征和症状进行教育,并学习可用资源,为骨科和对抗疗法住院项目中的受折磨同事提供帮助。
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Encouraging a Little Help from Our Friends: Resident Physician Burnout & Peer Communication Curriculum.

Introduction: Resident physician burnout and depression rates are increasing faster than in the non-physician workforce. To foster a supportive community where such concerns may be addressed, residents can be educated in identification and first-line support of burnout in fellow residents. The literature has not described peer roleplaying applied toward aiding fellow residents with burnout.

Method: This pilot study evaluated an educational component aimed at fostering a strong emotional and informational social support system. The curriculum used peer roleplaying to develop self-awareness and social support, improve communication skills, and teach about existing mental health resources, thereby encouraging intervention. Residents listed behavioral manifestations of burnout and dysphoria that we developed into real-life scenarios. During experiential workshops, residents roleplayed "distressed" and "helper" residents and practiced communicating empathy. To tackle mental health stigma, all were required to practice expressing distress and seeking help. Residents completed a pre-roleplaying questionnaire, curriculum satisfaction questionnaire, and reflection essay.

Results: All 42 Internal Medicine and Transitional Year residents (69% male, 93% international medical graduates) participated. Resident-reported comfort, competence, confidence, and knowledge increased, as did positive appraisals of the clinical teaching environment representing a safe atmosphere. Six themes were cited in >25% of essays: knowledge of communication techniques, knowledge of approach tactics or strategies, knowledge of hospital resources, commitment to helping colleagues, importance of burnout, and belief this training produced a better understanding of oneself.

Conclusion: As first-witnesses of resident physician distress, peers occupy an underutilized, yet crucial preventive and supportive role in burnout and mental health intervention, especially during times of shared crises such as the coronavirus pandemic. Creating roleplays from personal experiences facilitated meaningful discussion of burnout and dysphoric emotions. Roleplaying offered a low-cost, effective method to destigmatize and encourage discussion of burnout, educate on signs and symptoms, and learn available resources to offer an afflicted colleague in osteopathic and allopathic residency programs.

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