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Optimizing Resilience and Wellbeing for Healthcare Professions Trainees and Healthcare Professionals During Public Health Crises - Practical Tips for an 'integrative Resilience' Approach

Overview
Journal Med Teach
Publisher Informa Healthcare
Specialty Medical Education
Date 2020 May 26
PMID 32449867
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Public health crises, including pandemics, are associated with significant health risk and concomitant stress, fear, decreased sense of control, and uncertainty. Deleterious impact on both physical and mental health can result, including for healthcare professionals and health professions trainees. Changes in governmental policies and hospital protocols for healthcare professionals as well as disruption of educational formats and requirements for trainees can ensue. Difficult anxiety-provoking realities of public health crises including pandemics which involve caring for many seriously ill patients, moral distress including difficult care decisions, personal health risk, and/or potential risk to one's family can take a dire toll on the mental health of healthcare professionals at all stages of the professional lifecycle. Educational disruptions can create significant anxiety for trainees about completing requirements and achieving competencies. Within this, coping skills may be challenged and strengths may be elucidated as well. Such crises create an imperative for medical educators to support trainees' wellbeing through adaptive flexibility for curriculum innovation and culturally sensitive resilience and wellbeing interventions. Strategies ('tips') to optimize resilience and wellbeing with an integrative resilience approach of individual, learning environment, and organization/systems factors are presented.

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