| Literature DB >> 32512054 |
Pnina G Weiss1, Su-Ting T Li2.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic challenged program leaders to respond rapidly to changes in health care delivery, protect trainee safety, and transform educational activities. The pandemic demanded that program directors prioritize and address myriad threats to trainees' well-being. In this paper, we adapt Maslow's needs framework to systematically address trainee well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic and identify potential interventions to meet trainee needs at the program, institution, and extrainstitutional levels. Transforming education to effectively respond to trainee well-being needs requires leadership, and we use Kotter's 8-step change management model as an example of a framework to effectively lead change. Program leaders can take this opportunity to reflect upon their training programs and take the opportunity to improve them. Some of the systems of education we develop during the COVID-19 pandemic, such as telehealth, tele-education, and ways to stay connected may provide advantages and will be important to continue and expand upon post-COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: coronavirus disease 2019; health; internship and residency; leadership
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32512054 PMCID: PMC7273143 DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2020.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acad Pediatr ISSN: 1876-2859 Impact factor: 3.107
Examples of Potential Interventions to Address Resident/Fellow Wellness Needs Using Maslow's Need Framework During COVID-19 Pandemic
| Adapted Maslow Need | Theme | Categories | Examples of Potential Interventions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extrainstitutional | Institutional | Department/Program | |||
| Physiologic | Food | Food while working | Extra money on meal cards | Provide meals while in hospital/clinic | |
| Food at home | Community-provided meals to health care workers | Hospital-sponsored groceries | Gift cards for food-delivery services | ||
| Sleep | Sleep on-call | ACGME work hour restrictions - pandemic status | Additional call rooms | ||
| Respite lodging | State/local lodging for health care workers | Respite housing | |||
| Physical health | COVID-19 screening and testing | COVID-19 testing stations in community | Illness screening | Track COVID-19 exposure and testing | |
| COVID-19 illness management | Track sick residents | Track sick residents | |||
| Mental health | Mental health hotlines for health care workers | On-call mental health provider | Screening for mental health | ||
| Childcare | State-supported daycare facilities for health care workers | Institutional daycare | Centralized resource list | ||
| Safety | Personal safety | Personal protective equipment (PPE) | ACGME requirements | Adequate PPE | PPE training |
| Accommodation of high risk individuals (pregnancy, immunocompromised, etc.) | Institutional policies defining high-risk population | Scheduling to accommodate high-risk individuals | |||
| Safety of family | Short- and long-term housing (for COVID-19 exposure and positive) | Centralized information re: disinfection protocol and housing | |||
| Financial security | Job insecurity (personal or spouse) | Governmental subsidies | Counseling about job alternatives | ||
| Additional expenses | Paid leave of absence | ||||
| Schedule and patient care responsibilities | Vacation policy | Short- and long- term schedules, including vacation | |||
| Sense of belonging | Social support from colleagues | APPD virtual events | Virtual institutional and departmental town halls | Group-based learning activities | |
| Social support from friends and family | Technology (ie, ZOOM Webex, etc.) to connect with friends and family | ||||
| Esteem | Appreciation by and for others | Expressions of appreciation | Community appreciation | Additional compensation | Shout-outs, expressions of gratitude, virtual graduation, gift certificates |
| Self-identity as physician | Engagement in meaningful activities | Remote into rounds, electives, advocacy work, scholarship | |||
| Caring for adult patients | Adequate supervision and teaching | Collaboration with Internal Medicine (IM), Med-Peds program leadership | IM bootcamp, supervision by IM and Med-Peds faculty | ||
| Self-actualization | Mentoring | Faculty mentoring program | |||
| Curriculum | Structure and content | ABP allowing PD to request waivers for graduating trainees | Development of new curricula (eg, new rotations or electives, telehealth, web-based curricula) | ||
| Telehealth to promote physical distancing | ACGME requirements for education, including telehealth | Institutional policies in regard to telehealth and trainees | Training residents in telehealth | ||
| Career development | APPD and COPS resources and guidelines for application to residency and fellowship programs | Virtual career mentoring by departmental chair, faculty, educational and program leaders | Virtual career mentoring, facilitate networking, provide exposure to trainees’ fields of interest, support CV development | ||
ACGME indicates Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education; APPD, Association of Pediatric Program Directors; ABP, American Board of Pediatrics; PD, program director; COPS, Council of Pediatric Subspecialties; and CV, curriculum vitae.
Examples of How to Lead Educational Change During the COVID-19 Pandemic Using Kotter's 8 Steps to Leading Change Framework
| Kotter's 8 Steps to Leading Change | Examples of Leading Change During the COVID-19 Pandemic |
|---|---|
Establish a sense of urgency SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) | COVID-19 pandemic disrupts in-person direct patient care and education |
Form a powerful guiding coalition Include pertinent stakeholders Emphasize teamwork | Program leadership (program director, associate program directors, coordinators, chief residents) |
Create a vision Vision to direct change effort Strategies to achieve vision | Keep trainees safe |
Communicate the vision How will you communicate vision and strategies? | Communicate frequently and regularly |
Empower others to act on the vision Identify/get rid of obstacles to change Change systems/structures that undermine vision Encourage risk taking Use guiding coalition as role models | Empower faculty and trainees to engage in interactive distance learning modalities and telemedicine |
Plan for and create short-term wins Plan for visible performance improvements Create those improvements Recognize/reward others involved in those improvements | Front-load didactic schedule with faculty willing to experiment with novel tele-education modalities |
Consolidate improvement and produce still more change Build on momentum to change systems, structures, and policies that don't fit vision | Share best practices of how faculty engage with learners remotely |
Institutionalize new approaches Make it a habit by articulating the relationship between the new behaviors and success Plan for succession by developing new leaders | Provide feedback to faculty about learner response to changes |
APPD indicates Association of Pediatric Program Directors; COPS, Council of Pediatric Subspecialties; COMSEP, Council on Medical Student Education in Pediatrics; ACGME, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education; ABP, American Board of Pediatrics; and LCME, Liaison Committee on Medical Education.