4.6 Article

Thriving in Residency: a Qualitative Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 37, Issue 9, Pages 2173-2179

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-022-07504-6

Keywords

Thriving; Residency; Medical Education

Funding

  1. Yale School of Medicine Medical Student Fellowship
  2. National Institutes of Health-NIDDK Medical Student Research Fellowship

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A study identified six key factors that contribute to resident physicians' sense of thriving: program leadership, learning climate, connectedness, joy in medicine, life balance, and intrinsic factors.
Background While a great deal of research has brought attention to the issue of physician burnout in recent years, and resident physician burnout in particular, the topics of physician well-being, and by extension physician thriving, have been relatively understudied. Consequently, we propose a model of resident physician thriving. Objective To understand what factors contribute to a subjective sense of thriving among resident physicians. Design In this study, we conducted in-depth interviews from May 2020 through February 2021 with resident physicians to determine what factors have contributed to their sense of thriving in their careers as well as in their lives more generally. We used a snowball sampling technique to recruit participants. Validated instruments were used to quantify the participant's subjective level of job and life satisfaction as well as their level of career burnout. To derive our conclusions, we employed thematic content analysis using a grounded theory-based approach. Participants Resident physicians in the internal medicine, pediatrics, and combined internal medicine-pediatrics residency programs at a single university-affiliated institution. Approach We interviewed those residents with high life, career, and residency satisfaction who did not meet criteria for burnout to explore those factors that contribute to their sense of thriving. Key Results Thirty-seven screening interviews were conducted. Twenty-four participants met criteria for life, career, and residency satisfaction while also not meeting criteria for burnout. The six key themes contributing to resident thriving that we identified during the course of our analysis included program leadership, learning climate, connectedness, joy in medicine, life balance, and intrinsic factors. Conclusions This project proposes a model of resident thriving that can potentially inform program structure, culture, and values.

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