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Building a RAFFT: Impact of a Professional Development Program for Women Faculty and Residents in Emergency Medicine

Overview
Journal AEM Educ Train
Publisher Wiley
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2022 Jul 1
PMID 35774534
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Women comprise 28% of faculty in academic departments of emergency medicine (EM) and 11% of academic chairs. Professional development programs for women are key to career success and to prevent pipeline attrition. Within emergency medicine, there is a paucity of outcomes-level data for such programs.

Objectives: We aim to measure the impact of a novel structured professional development curriculum and mentorship group (Resident and Faculty Female Tribe, or RAFFT) within an academic department of EM.

Methods: This prospective single-center curriculum implementation and evaluation was conducted in the academic year 2020-2021. A planning group identified potential curricular topics using an iterative Delphi process. We developed a 10-session longitudinal curriculum; a postcurriculum survey was conducted to assess the perceived benefit of the program in four domains.

Results: A total of 76% of 51 eligible women attended at least one session; for this project we analyzed the 24 participants (47%) who attended at least one session and completed both the pre- and the postsurvey. The majority of participants reported a positive benefit, which aligned with their expectations in the following areas: professional development (79.2%), job satisfaction (83.3%), professional well-being (70.8%), and personal well-being (79.2%). Resident physicians more often reported less benefit than expected compared to fellow/faculty physicians. Median perceived impact on career choice and trajectory was positive for all respondents.

Conclusions: Success of this professional development program was measured through a perceived benefit aligning with participant expectations, a positive impact on career choice and career trajectory for participants in each career stage, and a high level of engagement in this voluntary program. Recommendations for the successful implementation of professional development programs include early engagement of stakeholders, the application of data from a program-specific needs assessment, early dissemination of session dates to allow for protected time off, and structured discussions with appropriate identification of presession resources.

Citing Articles

Women's professional development programs for emergency physicians: A scoping review.

Frisch S, Desai R, Chung A, Love J, White B AEM Educ Train. 2024; 8(2):e10971.

PMID: 38525366 PMC: 10958937. DOI: 10.1002/aet2.10971.


Building a RAFFT: Impact of a professional development program for women faculty and residents in emergency medicine.

Li-Sauerwine S, Bambach K, McGrath J, Yee J, Boulger C, Hunold K AEM Educ Train. 2022; 6(3):e10763.

PMID: 35774534 PMC: 9222109. DOI: 10.1002/aet2.10763.

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