Investing in the Future: Building an Academic Hospitalist Faculty Development Program

Literatuur

Background: Academic hospital medicine (AHM) groups continue to grow rapidly, driven largely by clinical demands. While new hospitalist faculty usually have strong backgrounds in clinical medicine, they often lack the tools needed to achieve excellence in the other aspects of a faculty career, including teaching, research, quality improvement, and leadership skills. Objective: To develop and implement a Faculty Development (FD) Program that improves the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and scholarly output of first-year faculty. Intervention: We created a vision and framework for FD that targeted our new faculty but also engaged our entire Division of Hospital Medicine. New faculty participated in a dedicated coaching relationship with a more senior faculty member, a core curriculum, a teaching course, and activities to meet a set of stated scholarly expectations. All faculty participated in newly established divisional Grand Rounds, a lunch seminar series, and venues to share scholarship and works in progress. Results: Our FD programmatic offerings were rated highly overall on a scale of 1 to 5 (5 highest): Core Seminars 4.83 +/- 0.41, Coaching Program 4.5 +/- 0.84, Teaching Course 4.5 +/- 0.55, Grand Rounds 4.83 +/- 0.41, and Lunch Seminars 4.5 +/- 0.84. Compared to faculty hired in the 2 years prior to our FD program implementation, new faculty reported greater degrees of work satisfaction, increased comfort with their skills in a variety of areas, and improved academic output. Conclusion: Building FD programs can be effective to foster the development and satisfaction of new faculty while also creating a shared commitment towards an academic mission.

Auteur(s)
Sehgal, NL; Sharpe, BA; Auerbach, AA; Wachter, RM
Jaar
2011
Bron
Journal Of Hospital Medicine 6 (3) 161-166 Mar 2011