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Journal of General Internal Medicine logoLink to Journal of General Internal Medicine
letter
. 2018 Jul 23;33(11):1842–1844. doi: 10.1007/s11606-018-4589-1

Professional Development Coaching for Residents: Results of a 3-Year Positive Psychology Coaching Intervention

Kerri Palamara 1,, Carol Kauffman 2,3, Yuchiao Chang 1, Esteban A Barreto 4, Liyang Yu 1, Hasan Bazari 1, Karen Donelan 4
PMCID: PMC6206332  PMID: 30039493

INTRODUCTION

Residents are more likely to experience burnout compared to their age-matched peers.1 The Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has mandated that residency programs address resident and faculty well-being through their Clinical Learning Environment Review (CLER) program.2

Positive psychology coaching can help residents connect with and achieve positive emotions, meaningful relationships, strengths, engagement, and purpose.3 We implemented the Professional Development Coaching Program (PDCP) in our internal medicine residency program in 2012 and demonstrated a reduction in intern emotional exhaustion (EE) after year 1.4 In this paper, we report on the experiences of residents after year 3.

METHODS

Setting and Participants

The PDCP included 179 residents who were assigned a coach in the 2014–2015 academic year. Pairs were expected to meet quarterly and participation was logged administratively. We define full participation as ≥ 3 meetings per year; there was no consequence for not participating.

Intervention

Using positive psychology and coaching principles, the PDCP trains volunteer faculty “coaches” to work with resident “coachees,” intentionally matched outside of their discipline. Coaches were provided with a guide for each meeting. All meetings included reflection on experiences, goal-setting, and directions for engaging in a positive psychology coaching dialogue. Annually, each initial meeting focused on what personal and professional success would look like for that academic year, and ended with reflection on accomplishments. Year 1 included strengths exploration, coping with stress through building resilience, and finding engagement and meaning in their work. Year 2 added development of leadership capabilities and emotional intelligence. Year 3 added authentic leadership, finding their passion and purpose, and cultivating life’s lessons.

Measures

The measures used to assess the program process included (1) participation (administrative data), (2) communication (survey), and (3) reflection (survey). PDCP outcomes were (1) improved coping skills; (2) improved perception of professional roles/relationships; (3) decreased (EE) on the Maslach Burnout Inventory; (4) coachee experience; and (5) residency satisfaction.5,6

RESULTS

Characteristics of respondents and non-respondents were similar in terms of age, race, ethnicity, program year, and EE. Fifty-six percent were full participants. Survey completion and coaching participation were greatest in first and third years; 81.9% rated communication with coach as “excellent or good” and 80.0% reported “excellent or good” opportunities for reflection.

Perceived Coping Skills, Roles, and Relationships

Residents who participated fully in the program and had positive quality of communication with their coach were significantly more likely to report higher coping skills and better working relationships in several dimensions (Table 1).

Table 1.

Coaching Program Measures and Coping

Trainee challenges Participation Quality of communication with a coach
Full (%) Partial (%) p value Excellent (%) Good (%) Fair/poor (%) p value
Coping with stress 70 35 0.0004 73 44 12 0.0001
Distress in personal life 80 51 0.002 86 56 24 0.0001
Information processing 67 35 0.001 78 30 6 0.0001
Work-life balance 70 28 0.0001 66 44 18 0.001
Work relationships 70 40 0.002 78 33 24 0.0001
Self-confidence 85 53 0.0005 88 67 24 0.0001
Administrative burdens 45 14 0.001 51 7 6 0.0001

The survey stated the following: “In previous research, the following have been noted as major challenges for trainees. For each one, please indicate if you believe the coaching program has improved your ability to cope.” Responses were examined by resident participation and quality of communication with coach

Emotional Exhaustion

Residents who reported fair/poor opportunities for reflection were more likely to report high EE (85.0% vs. 44.9% from those reported good opportunities or 31.4% from those reported excellent opportunities, p < 0.001). EE did not differ by program year or full vs. partial participation.

Coachee Experience and Residency Program Satisfaction

Overall, 73.1% of coachees reported excellent/good experiences being a coachee, 92.2% of coachees would “definitely or probably recommend” our residency program to an incoming applicant, and 78.3% would “definitely or probably recommend” a coaching program to other residencies. Table 2 shows bivariate relationships of process and outcome measures. Extent of participation was significantly associated with an “excellent” overall experience of being a coachee (54.1% vs 20.9%, p < 0.001). Those with excellent opportunities for reflection were more likely to report excellent experience of being a coachee (68.6% vs. 35.0%, p < 0.001); more likely to “definitely recommend” the residency program to others (91.2% vs. 25.0%, p < 0.001); and more likely to definitely recommend the PDCP program (65.2% vs. 46.7%, p = 0.017).

Table 2.

Program Processes with Coachee Experience, Workplace, and Coaching Program Satisfaction

Workplace and coaching program satisfaction
Residency at MGH Participation Quality of communication Opportunity to reflect
All, N = 104* Full, N = 61 Partial, N = 43 p values Excellent, N = 59 Good, N = 27 Fair/poor, N = 17 p values† Excellent, N = 35 Good, N = 49 Fair/poor, N = 20 p values†
N % N % N % N % N % N % N % N % N %
Experience being a coachee < 0.001 < 0.001 < 0.001
 Excellent 42 40.4 33 54.1 9 20.9 37 62.7 4 14.8 0 24 68.6 11 22.4 7 35.0
 Good 34 32.7 22 36.1 12 27.9 18 30.5 13 48.1 3 17.6 5 14.3 23 46.9 6 30.0
 Fair/poor 28 26.9 6 9.8 22 51.2 4 6.8 10 37.0 14 82.4 6 17.1 15 30.6 7 35.0
Recommend qualified applicants pursue residency at MGH 0.68 0.017 < 0.001
 Definitely would 67 65.0 40 66.7 27 62.8 41 69.5 20 74.1 6 31 91.2 31 63.3 5 25.0
 Probably would 28 27.2 15 25.0 13 30.2 12 20.3 7 25.9 9 2 5.9 16 32.7 10 50.0
 Probably/definitely would NOT 8 7.8 5 8.3 3 7.0 6 10.2 0 2 1 2.9 2 4.1 5 25.0
Recommend coaching to future programs 0.013 < 0.001 0.017
 Definitely would 32 43.2 25 54.3 7 25.0 29 64.4 3 16.7 0 15 65.2 10 27.8 7 46.7
 Probably would 26 35.1 15 32.6 11 39.3 13 28.9 8 44.4 5 45.5 4 17.4 17 47.2 5 33.3
 Probably/definitely would NOT 16 21.6 6 13.0 10 35.7 3 6.7 7 38.9 6 54.5 4 17.4 9 25.0 3 20.0

*One respondent did not provide answers to any of these survey items

From chi-square tests with outcomes dichotomized as top-box vs. others

Residents were first asked to rate their experience as a coachee (excellent, good, fair/poor). Residents were then asked to answer the following two questions using a 4-point Likert scale (definitely would, probably would, probably would not, or definitely would not): “Given what you now know about your training experience, would you advise a qualified applicant to pursue a training here?” and “Given what you know about the Professional Development Coaching Program, would you advise other training programs to implement a coaching program?” The first question was an indicator of workplace satisfaction and the second was a marker of coaching program satisfaction. Responses were also stratified by participation, quality of communication with coach, and self-reported opportunities to reflect on one’s own performance

DISCUSSION

We implemented a positive psychology coaching program in a large internal medicine residency. Most residents participated fully. We observed a significant association between a positive program experience, opportunities to reflect, and positive residency experience, as well as increased coping and relationship skills.

While we measure several significant bivariate associations in this cross-sectional sample, our single-site study is limited by the small number of coaches with paired 3-year follow-up data. This limits longitudinal multivariate analyses on the full 3-year cohort.

The ACGME CLER Program now mandates that residency programs have mechanisms in place to assess and address resident burnout and well-being. Positive psychology coaching, using a strengths-based approach, provides participants with additional tools required to cope with the substantial personal and professional stressors they face during their residency.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the faculty coaches and resident participants who engaged in the program, as well as the Department of Medicine for their support in developing and onboarding this program. The authors wish to express gratitude to the Dr. George Thibault and the Josiah H. Macy Foundation, as well as the Arthur Vining Davis Foundation, for the financial support for our program evaluation. The authors wish to acknowledge the Institute of Coaching for their expertise in designing and implementing this program.

Abbreviations

ACGME

Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education

CLER

Clinical Learning Environment Review

EE

emotional exhaustion

MBI

Maslach Burnout Inventory

PDCP

Professional Development Coaching Program

Funders

The Josiah H. Macy Foundation provided $35,000 of funding through a President’s Grant to support the establishment and investigation of this program. The Arthur Vining Davis Foundation provided $100,000 of funding through a Healthcare Grant to support the investigation and dissemination of this program.

Compliance with Ethical Standards

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

Data Sharing

Data sharing was not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analyzed during the current study.

Ethical Approval

This program and its evaluation were exempt by the institutional review board with exemption #45 CFR 46.101(b) (1). The research was conducted in established or commonly accepted educational settings, involving normal educational practices.

Prior Presentations

While the tools and implementation process used in the coaching program have been shared in numerous workshops at national conferences (Society of General Internal Medicine, Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine, American College of Physicians) and invited faculty development workshops, the data included in this paper has not been previously presented.

References

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