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SMART-R: A Prospective Cohort Study of a Resilience Curriculum for Residents by Residents

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ObjectiveThis study aimed to determine the feasibility of a resident-led resiliency curriculum developed by residents, for residents.MethodsThe Stress Management and Resiliency Training Program for Residents (SMART-R) is a 6-h group-based… Click to show full abstract

ObjectiveThis study aimed to determine the feasibility of a resident-led resiliency curriculum developed by residents, for residents.MethodsThe Stress Management and Resiliency Training Program for Residents (SMART-R) is a 6-h group-based curriculum that teaches meditation, behavioral skills, and positive perspective-taking strategies. SMART-R was implemented for all medicine and psychiatry interns at a large US teaching hospital during the first 6 months of internship. Risk and resilience factors for burnout were assessed before and after the curriculum. A wearable health-tracking device was used to assess feasibility of wearables for studying resident health behaviors.ResultsAll 73 medicine and 17 psychiatry interns participated in the SMART-R curriculum. Seventy-five of 85 interns (88%) consented to be in the study. Thirty-one of 75 (41%) completed both baseline and post surveys of risk and resilience factors for burnout. Preliminary curriculum feedback was enthusiastic. Twenty-five of 62 (40%) wore the health tracker more than half the time in the first 3 months of the study.ConclusionsImplementation of a resident-led resiliency curriculum for internal medicine and psychiatry interns at an academic medical center during the most challenging first months of internship is feasible. Future controlled studies are needed to determine efficacy of SMART-R on risk and resilience factors. Over the first 6 months of internship, we observed an expected increase in burnout, fatigue, and depression, though other key risk and resilience factors were unchanged.

Keywords: medicine; first months; curriculum; residents residents; study; resilience

Journal Title: Academic Psychiatry
Year Published: 2017

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