Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open (Jun 2023)

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

  • Jennie A. Buchanan,
  • Sarah Meadows,
  • Jason Whitehead,
  • W. Gannon Sungar,
  • Christy Angerhofer,
  • Abraham Nussbaum,
  • Barbara Blok,
  • Todd Guth,
  • Katherine Bakes,
  • Malorie Millner,
  • Lavonne Salazar,
  • Megan Stephens,
  • Bonnie Kaplan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12971
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Emergency 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.