Editor—During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, New York City hospitals witnessed an unprecedented demand for critical care medicine services.1 Academic medical centres including NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center (NYP/WCMC) significantly restructured their residencies to meet this need. The anaesthesiology residency at NYP/WCMC, consisting of 78 residents across a 4-yr training programme in one of the largest hospital systems in the USA, is an example of successful reorganisation of trainees to serve in a public health emergency. Its trainees were particularly well suited to lead during the pandemic; residents receive an average of 7 months of critical care training across various units including medical, surgical, cardiothoracic, burn, paediatric, neonatal, and neurointensive care settings. In 2 weeks, an anaesthesiology residency with intermittent critical care experiences was transformed into a critical care residency with intermittent anaesthesiology experiences. This was achieved by implementing four specific strategies: redesigning resident roles, creating a novel ‘resident-fellow’ position, initiating a COVID-specific education program, and opening access to mental health resources.
Redesigning resident roles
Over 3 weeks in March 2020, the NYP hospital system expanded its ICU capacity by 130%– to 970 beds (about 25% of which were located at the NYP/WCMC campus), which was matched with a dramatic increase in junior physician ICU coverage. Two institutional events allowed for this flexibility in redeploying residents beyond their scope of practice2: the cancellation of elective surgery on March 13, 2020, and the granting of pandemic emergency status by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (the US accreditation body for graduate medical training) on March 25, 2020. Resident schedules across all specialties were redesigned from a call/late system into a 12-h shift work paradigm. This simplified staffing across ICUs based on patient census allowed for predictable recovery time between shifts and eased integration of trainees from different specialties into critical care teams. During the peak surge period of the pandemic, 83% of NYP/WCM anaesthesiology residents were redeployed across nine ICUs at five tertiary-level hospitals across the NYP system and its affiliates. The remainder were assigned to emergency surgery and airway teams. In the post-surge phase, ICU shifts were reduced as the patient census dwindled, allowing for an opportunity for a relief/recovery period.
‘Resident-fellow’ role
A novel ‘resident-fellow’ position was created to leverage senior resident experience as critical care provisions were expanded necessitating the need for oversight over redeployed house-staff, attending, and nursing staff. This is an example of ‘battlefield promotion’ in military medicine as applied to the civilian healthcare setting.3 Resident-fellows were particularly valuable in the novel ICUs created in operating rooms and PACUs, where anaesthesia machines were used as ICU ventilators, ICU-trained nursing and respiratory therapists were in short supply, and the physical layout of beds was non-traditional.4 Further, as many of the attendings assigned to these operating room-ICU units were non-intensivist anaesthesiology consultants operating outside of their normal sphere of practice, resident-fellows with more recent critical care experiences were tasked with an additional role to help bridge appropriate workflows in these environments, such as to help guide bedside rounds. Finally, resident-fellows oversaw junior and non-anaesthesiology residents with limited experience in critical care, managed anaesthetic ventilators, and were immediately available to stabilise bedside emergencies. This dynamic role provided a unique opportunity for senior residents to transition into the role of consultant anaesthesiologists and perioperative leaders.
Critical care/COVID education curriculum
The frontline role of trainees in the management of a new disease, combined with the need to maintain social distancing, led to a rapid transformation of the existing education programme into a virtual one focused on emerging COVID-19 literature and relevant ICU topics (Table 1 ). These resident-led, faculty-moderated sessions ensured trainees were provided information that was of the greatest immediate value. Virtual education was also conducted via Slack (Slack Technologies, San Francisco, CA, USA), a communication platform that was already in use before the pandemic as a collaborative educational tool suitable for use in the clinical setting. The success of this model rested on three key factors: an agile response to rapidly-evolving scientific developments, flexibility to work around a shifting and saturated workforce schedule, and a close collaboration between residents and core education leadership. These resident-led sessions also represented a novel opportunity for the development of residents as educators.
Table 1.
Topics in medical knowledge | Topics in patient care/interpersonal and communications skills/professionalism/systems-based practice |
---|---|
Pathophysiology and management of ARDS | Perspectives of healthcare workers from the HIV/AIDS epidemic |
Utilisation of paralysis and proning for ARDS | Ethics during pandemics |
Pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of COVID-19 associated thromboses | Difficult conversations for families of critically ill patients |
Point-of-care ultrasound for COVID-19 associated cardiac and pulmonary disease | Global health perspectives on COVID-19 and pandemics |
Use of steroids in septic shock | Management of LTV™ ventilators (transport ventilators) |
Review of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and utilisation for COVID-19 patients | Healthcare disparities for COVID-19 patients |
AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Mental health resources
The residency leadership anticipated that the combination of clinical burdens and social isolation would create emotional hardship for trainees. This concern was drawn from existing evidence that anaesthesiology residents were at higher risk for substance abuse disorders, burnout, and suicide.5, 6, 7, 8 It has also been supported by reports of a high rate of psychological distress amongst frontline COVID-19 physicians.9 Beginning weeks before the surge, a psychologist and psychiatrists were invited to conduct virtual weekly closed-group mental health sessions that utilised techniques such as talk therapy and debriefing to process the experiences of high-volume mortality and morbidity, iatrogenic errors, futility of care, fear for one's safety, burnout, social isolation, and healthcare disparities. These sessions allowed residents to become familiar with mental health providers and to develop resiliency. Trainees beset by illness were offered direct channels to mental health services for additional support. In addition to formal outreach by mental health professionals, daily video conferences with the residency program director and weekly forums with the department chair were held to streamline communication, provide transparency on institutional planning, and to discuss concerns.
Conclusion
Over the course of 2 weeks, the anaesthesiology residency at NYP/WCMC was systematically and effectively restructured to accommodate the surge in critically ill COVID-19 patients. An important lesson learned from this experience was how to execute this restructuring rapidly while maintaining a core set of values: high-quality care at the frontlines, organisational simplicity, resident safety, and wellness. These strategies may provide guidance for other institutions tasked with emergent redeployment of their trainees in future public health crises.
Declarations of interest
KOP is a member of the associate editorial board of the British Journal of Anaesthesia. The other authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge Ruth Gotian for her advise and counsel in the writing process of this manuscript.
References
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