Leadership Experiences of Internal Medicine Residents: A Needs Assessment for Leadership Curricula.

IF 3.4 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Journal of Healthcare Leadership Pub Date : 2022-09-21 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.2147/JHL.S376089
Maureen D Lyons, Julie Oyler, Katherine Iossi, Sarah Merriam
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Purpose: Leadership development during medical training is critical. Accrediting bodies strongly recommend and residents desire leadership training. However, limited needs assessment data exist regarding trainee perceptions of and experiences with leadership training. Our objective is to describe residents' perceptions of leadership and desires for leadership training with the goal of informing effective curricular development.

Patients and methods: In 2019 a trained qualitative interviewer conducted semi-structured interviews with volunteer second-year categorical internal medicine residents recruited via email across four institutions. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and inductively coded by two independent coders. After adjudicating discrepancies, coders synthesized codes into broader themes. Final thematic analysis was triangulated with the entire author group.

Results: Fourteen residents were interviewed (50% female). Few reported prior leadership training. Thematic analysis yielded six main themes. First, residents perceive "leadership" to be related to formal, assigned, hierarchical roles. Second, residents identify their own leadership primarily in the inpatient clinical setting. Third, residents identify clinical competence, emotional intelligence, and communication as important skills for effective leadership. Fourth, residents struggle to identify where leadership is currently being taught. Fifth, residents desire additional leadership development. Finally, residents prefer well-labeled, interactive methods for leadership development.

Conclusion: Although residents desire leadership development, these skills are not often explicitly taught, labeled, or assessed. Curriculum developers may consider explicitly contextualizing leadership training within an "everyday leadership" framework, dovetailing leadership coaching with daily teaching workflow and feedback structures, and implementing faculty development initiatives to allow for appropriate feedback and assessment of these skills.

内科住院医师的领导经验:领导力课程的需求评估。
目的:医学培训期间的领导力发展至关重要。认证机构强烈推荐和居民渴望领导力培训。然而,关于受训者对领导力培训的看法和经验的需求评估数据有限。我们的目标是描述居民对领导力的看法和对领导力培训的渴望,目的是为有效的课程开发提供信息。患者和方法:2019年,一位训练有素的定性采访者对四家机构通过电子邮件招募的志愿二年级分类内科住院医生进行了半结构化访谈。访谈由两名独立编码员进行录音、转录和归纳编码。在判定差异后,编码员将代码合成为更广泛的主题。最后的主题分析是与整个作者组进行三角分析。结果:共访谈14名住院医师(50%为女性)。很少有人报告之前接受过领导力培训。专题分析产生了六个主题。首先,居民认为“领导”与正式的、分配的、等级分明的角色有关。第二,住院医师主要在住院临床环境中确定自己的领导地位。第三,住院医师认为临床能力、情商和沟通能力是有效领导的重要技能。第四,居民们很难确定目前在哪里教授领导力。第五,居民希望获得更多的领导力发展。最后,住院医师更喜欢标签清晰、互动的领导力培养方法。结论:尽管住院医师渴望领导力的发展,但这些技能往往没有被明确地教授、标记或评估。课程开发人员可以考虑在“日常领导力”框架中明确地将领导力培训置于情境中,将领导力培训与日常教学工作流程和反馈结构相结合,并实施教师发展计划,以允许对这些技能进行适当的反馈和评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Healthcare Leadership
Journal of Healthcare Leadership HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.30%
发文量
27
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Efficient and successful modern healthcare depends on a growing group of professionals working together as an interdisciplinary team. However, many forces shape the delivery of healthcare; changes are being driven by the markets, transformations in concepts of health and wellbeing, technology and research and discovery. Dynamic leadership will guide these necessary transformations. The Journal of Healthcare Leadership is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal focusing on leadership for the healthcare professions. The publication strives to amalgamate current and future healthcare professionals and managers by providing key insights into leadership progress and challenges to improve patient care. The journal aspires to inform key decision makers and those professionals with ambitions of leadership and management; it seeks to connect professionals who are engaged in similar endeavours and to provide wisdom from those working in other industries. Senior and trainee doctors, nurses and allied healthcare professionals, medical students, healthcare managers and allied leaders are invited to contribute to this publication
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