Effect of an Intensive Mindful Practice Workshop on Patient-Centered Compassionate Care, Clinician Well-Being, Work Engagement, and Teamwork.
Autor: | Epstein RM; Mr. Epstein: Professor of Family Medicine, Oncology and Medicine (Palliative Care), and American Cancer Society's Clinical Research Professor, Codirector, Center for Communication and Disparities Research, Departments of Family Medicine and Medicine and the Wilmot Cancer Institute, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY. Mr. Marshall: Professor, Department of Neurology, Division of Geriatric Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY. Mr. Sanders: Senior Instructor, Department of Family Medicine, Center for Communication and Disparities Research, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY. Mr. Krasner: Professor of Clinical Medicine and Clinical Family Medicine, Departments Medicine and Family Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY., Marshall F, Sanders M, Krasner MS |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | The Journal of continuing education in the health professions [J Contin Educ Health Prof] 2022 Jan 01; Vol. 42 (1), pp. 19-27. |
DOI: | 10.1097/CEH.0000000000000379 |
Abstrakt: | Introduction: Mindfulness-based interventions for health professionals have been linked to improvements in burnout, well-being, empathy, communication, patient-centered care, and patient safety, but the optimal formats and intensity of training have been difficult to determine because of the paucity of studies and the heterogeneity of programs. A 4-days residential "Mindful Practice" workshop for physicians and medical educators featuring contemplative practices, personal narratives, and appreciative dialogs about challenging experiences may hold promise in improving participants' well-being while also improving compassionate care, job satisfaction, work engagement, and teamwork. Methods: We collected baseline and 2-month follow-up data during four workshops conducted in 2018 to 2019 at conference centers in the United States and Europe. Primary outcomes were burnout, work-related distress, job satisfaction, work engagement, patient-centered compassionate care, and teamwork. Results: Eighty-five of 120 participants (71%) completed both surveys (mean age was 49.3 and 68.2% female). There were improvements (P < .01) in two of three burnout components (emotional exhaustion and depersonalization), work-related distress, job satisfaction, patient-centered compassionate care, work engagement and meaning, teamwork, well-being, positive emotion, mindfulness, somatic symptoms, and spirituality. Effect sizes (standardized mean difference of change) ranged from 0.25 to 0.61. With Bonferroni adjustments (P < .0031), teamwork, general well-being, and mindfulness became nonsignificant. Discussion: An intensive, multiday, mindfulness-based workshop for physicians had clinically significant positive effects on clinician well-being, quality of interpersonal care and work satisfaction, and meaning and engagement, all important indicators of improved health and sustainability of the health care workforce. Future iterations of the program should increase the focus on teamwork. Competing Interests: Disclosures: The authors declare no conflict of interest. (Copyright © 2021 The Alliance for Continuing Education in the Health Professions, the Association for Hospital Medical Education, and the Society for Academic Continuing Medical Education.) |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
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