Context: Physicians in the United States increasingly confront stress, burnout, and other serious symptoms at an alarming level. As a result, there is growing public interest in the development of interventions that improve physician resiliency. Objective: The aim of this study is to evaluate the perceived impact of Physician Well-being Coaching on physician stress and resiliency, as implemented in a major medical center. Study Design: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 physician-participants, and three coaches of a Physician Well-being Coaching pilot focused on three main areas: life context, impacts of coaching, and coaching process. Participants: Interviewees were physicians who completed between three and eight individual coaching sessions between October 2012 and May 2013 through the Physician Wellbeing Coaching pilot program. Analysis: Qualitative content analysis of the 11 physician interviews and three coach interviews using Atlas.ti to generate patterns and themes. Results: Physician Well-being Coaching helped participants increase resilience via skill and awareness development in the following three main areas: (1) boundary setting and prioritization, (2) self-compassion and self-care, and (3) self-awareness. These insights often led to behavior changes and were perceived by physicians to have indirect but positive impact on patient care. Conclusions: Devaluing self-care while prioritizing the care of others may be a significant, but unnecessary, source of burnout for physicians. This study suggests that coaching can potentially help physicians alter this pattern through skill development and increased self-awareness. It also suggests that by strengthening physician self-care, coaching can help to positively impact patient care.
Physician Coaching to Enhance Well-being: a Qualitative Analysis of a Pilot Intervention
Literatuur
Auteur(s)
Schneider, S; Kingsolver, K; Rosdahl, J
Jaar
2014
Bron
Explore- the Journal of Science and Healing 10(6): 372-379 Nov-Dec 2014