{"title":"How to … Create Peer-Facilitated Support Groups for Health Professions Students","authors":"Devora Beck-Pancer, Irina V. Kryzhanovskaya","doi":"10.1111/tct.70080","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n <p>Mental health declines throughout medical school for many students with half of students reporting symptoms of burnout, which may negatively impact individual health and professional development. American College of Physicians in alignment with the PERMA well-being model suggest organisations provide programming to promote belonging and social support through opportunities to connect with peers. To overcome a medical culture that encourages perfectionism (while hiding vulnerability) and to achieve meaningful interaction, brave and safe student spaces need to be created. Medical student support groups facilitated by psychotherapists and faculty have promoted well-being yet are limited by facilitator availability and student concern for possible career implications. To create brave spaces for meaningful interaction, the authors created and implemented unstructured, participant-directed, near-peer facilitated medical student support groups. The authors recommend empowering student facilitators with (1) a brief training from a psychologist, (2) access to a faculty advisor, (3) a sample facilitator guide for ‘how to’ facilitate unstructured sessions and (4) opportunities for reflection and for receiving participant feedback. Participants and facilitators appreciated the opportunity to connect honestly with peers and have experiences normalised. Near-peer facilitated support groups have the potential to improve the training experience, promote well-being and mental health and shape the culture of medicine.</p>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":47324,"journal":{"name":"Clinical Teacher","volume":"22 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical Teacher","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tct.70080","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mental health declines throughout medical school for many students with half of students reporting symptoms of burnout, which may negatively impact individual health and professional development. American College of Physicians in alignment with the PERMA well-being model suggest organisations provide programming to promote belonging and social support through opportunities to connect with peers. To overcome a medical culture that encourages perfectionism (while hiding vulnerability) and to achieve meaningful interaction, brave and safe student spaces need to be created. Medical student support groups facilitated by psychotherapists and faculty have promoted well-being yet are limited by facilitator availability and student concern for possible career implications. To create brave spaces for meaningful interaction, the authors created and implemented unstructured, participant-directed, near-peer facilitated medical student support groups. The authors recommend empowering student facilitators with (1) a brief training from a psychologist, (2) access to a faculty advisor, (3) a sample facilitator guide for ‘how to’ facilitate unstructured sessions and (4) opportunities for reflection and for receiving participant feedback. Participants and facilitators appreciated the opportunity to connect honestly with peers and have experiences normalised. Near-peer facilitated support groups have the potential to improve the training experience, promote well-being and mental health and shape the culture of medicine.
在整个医学院,许多学生的心理健康状况都在下降,一半的学生报告有倦怠的症状,这可能对个人健康和职业发展产生负面影响。美国医师学会(American College of Physicians)与PERMA幸福感模型一致,建议组织提供项目,通过与同伴联系的机会来促进归属感和社会支持。为了克服鼓励完美主义(同时隐藏脆弱性)的医学文化,实现有意义的互动,需要创造勇敢和安全的学生空间。由心理治疗师和教师推动的医学生支持小组促进了健康,但受到辅导员可用性和学生对可能的职业影响的关注的限制。为了为有意义的互动创造勇敢的空间,作者创建并实施了非结构化、参与者导向、近同伴促进的医学生支持小组。作者建议授权给学生辅导员(1)心理学家的简短培训,(2)获得指导老师的指导,(3)一个关于“如何”促进非结构化会议的示范辅导员指南,(4)反思和接受参与者反馈的机会。参与者和辅导员都很感激有机会与同伴真诚地交流,并将经历正常化。近同伴促进支助小组有可能改善培训经验,促进福祉和心理健康,并塑造医学文化。
期刊介绍:
The Clinical Teacher has been designed with the active, practising clinician in mind. It aims to provide a digest of current research, practice and thinking in medical education presented in a readable, stimulating and practical style. The journal includes sections for reviews of the literature relating to clinical teaching bringing authoritative views on the latest thinking about modern teaching. There are also sections on specific teaching approaches, a digest of the latest research published in Medical Education and other teaching journals, reports of initiatives and advances in thinking and practical teaching from around the world, and expert community and discussion on challenging and controversial issues in today"s clinical education.