Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of a Virtual Professional Development Coaching Program on the Professional Fulfillment and Well-Being of Women Surgery Residents

Kerri Palamara, Sophia K. McKinley, Jacqueline T. Chu, Andrea L. Merrill, Liyang Yu, Sareh Parangi, Maryam S. Makowski, Yoon Soo Park, Karen Donelan, Sharon L. Stein

2022Annals of Surgery56 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the effect of a virtual coaching program offered to women surgery residents in a surgical society. BACKGROUND: Randomized controlled experiments evaluating the effect of coaching on trainee well-being and burnout is lacking. METHODS: Women surgery residents in the Association of Women Surgeons were recruited to participate in a randomized controlled trial of the effects of a virtual coaching program on trainee well-being. Attending surgeons served as coaches after completing in-person training. Residents (n=237) were randomized to intervention (three 1:1 coaching sessions over 9 mo) or control (e-mailed wellness resources). Participants were surveyed at baseline and postintervention using validated measures of well-being, burnout, and resilience. Changes in outcome measures between presurvey and postsurvey were compared between study arms. RESULTS: Survey response rates were 56.9% (n=66) in the control group and 69.4% (n=84) in the intervention group ( P =0.05). The intervention group showed significant improvement in professional fulfillment ( P =0.021), burnout (0.026), work exhaustion (0.017), self-valuation (0.003), and well-being ( P =0.002); whereas the control group showed significant improvement in self-valuation ( P =0.015) and significant decline in resilience ( P =0.025). The intervention group had a significant improvement in well-being ( P =0.015) and intolerance of uncertainty ( P =0.015) compared to controls. CONCLUSIONS: Women surgery residents who participated in a remote coaching program offered by a surgical society demonstrated improvement in aspects of well-being relative to peers who did not receive coaching. Therefore, remote coaching offered by a professional society may be a useful component of initiatives directed at trainee well-being.

Topics & Concepts

CoachingMedicineBurnoutRandomized controlled trialPsychological resiliencePhysical therapyIntervention (counseling)NursingSurgeryClinical psychologyPsychologyPsychotherapistHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutDiversity and Career in MedicineMentoring and Academic Development