Literature DB >> 31414020

Development of the Resident Wellness Scale for Measuring Resident Wellness.

R Brent Stansfield1, Dan Giang2, Tsveti Markova1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Graduate medical education programs have a responsibility to monitor resident wellness. Residents are at risk of burnout, depression, and suicide. Burnout and depression are associated with poor patient care. Many existing tools measure burnout, depression, and general human well-being, but resident wellness is a distinct construct. We aimed to develop an instrument to measure resident wellness directly.
METHODS: An expert panel from two purposefully different graduate medical education institutions generated a behavior- and experience-based model of resident wellness. The panel and resident leaders from both institutions generated 92 items, which were tested alongside anchor scales measuring burnout, depression, personality, optimism, life satisfaction, and social desirability in a convenience sample of 62 residents. Ten items were selected using a combination of factor analysis, a genetic algorithm, and purposeful selection. The 10-item scale was distributed to 5 institutions at which 376 residents completed it anonymously. Exploratory factor analysis was used to examine the factor structure of the scale.
RESULTS: The model of resident wellness aligned with an accepted framework of well-being in the literature. The 10-item Resident Wellness Scale broadly covered the model and correlated meaningfully with anchor scales. The factor structure of the scale suggested sensitivity to meaningful work, life security, institutional support, and social support.
CONCLUSIONS: This novel Resident Wellness Scale is designed to track residents' wellness longitudinally. It is sensitive to aspects of resident wellness that have been shown to reduce burnout and depression and appears to be a psychometrically strong measure of resident wellness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  burnout; factor analysis; graduate medical education; resident wellness; scale development

Year:  2019        PMID: 31414020      PMCID: PMC6676753          DOI: 10.17294/2330-0698.1653

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Patient Cent Res Rev        ISSN: 2330-068X


  27 in total

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  2 in total

1.  Threats to Reliability and Validity With Resident Wellness Surveying Efforts.

Authors:  Nital P Appelbaum; Sally A Santen; Scott Vota; Lauren Wingfield; Roy Sabo; Nicholas Yaghmour
Journal:  J Grad Med Educ       Date:  2019-10

2.  Building a Culture of Well-Being in Primary Care Resident Training Programs.

Authors:  R Brent Stansfield; Heidi Kenaga; Tsveti Markova
Journal:  Ochsner J       Date:  2021
  2 in total

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