4.5 Editorial Material

Strategies to promote resilience, empathy and well-being in the health professions: Insights from the 2015 CENTILE Conference

Journal

MEDICAL TEACHER
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 118-119

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0142159X.2017.1279278

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Arnold P. Gold Foundation
  2. Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation
  3. Georgetown University Medical Center

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The high prevalence of physician burnout is of great concern and may begin with observed declines in empathy and increases in stress and burnout in medical and health professions students. While underlying causes have been described, there is less certainty on how to create effective interventions in curricula and workplace. In October 2015, The Center for Innovation and Leadership in Education (CENTILE) at Georgetown University, together with MedStar Health, Georgetown's clinical partner, and six academic institutions sponsored a conference in Washington, DC. The goal was to discuss the current state of stress and burnout in the health professions, and to share best practices on strategies to promote resilience, empathy and well-being in students, residents, faculty and practitioners across health professions. In this issue of Medical Teacher, three articles address pertinent themes of the conference. Maslach and Leiter provide insights into burnout and strategies to alleviate it. Ekman and Krasner discuss various types of empathy and how neuroscience can be used to effectively cultivate empathy. In the third paper, Kreitzer and Klatt highlight three successful curricular interventions that foster self-awareness and boost resilience. Ultimately, effective strategies will be needed to address this issue at both the individual and organizational levels.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

Letter Education, Scientific Disciplines

Response to: The cost of caring

Aviad Haramati, Sian Cotton, Jamie S. Padmore, Hedy S. Wald, Peggy A. Weissinger

MEDICAL TEACHER (2017)

Review Education, Scientific Disciplines

Renters or Owners? Residents' Perceptions and Behaviors Regarding Error Reduction in Teaching Hospitals: A Literature Review

Jamie S. Padmore, Joseph Jaeger, Lee Ann Riesenberg, Kelly P. Karpovich, Joel C. Rosenfeld, Carl A. Patow

ACADEMIC MEDICINE (2009)

Article Education, Scientific Disciplines

The Unintended Consequences of Portfolios in Graduate Medical Education

Alisa Nagler, Kathryn Andolsek, Jamie S. Padmore

ACADEMIC MEDICINE (2009)

Review Education, Scientific Disciplines

Residents' Engagement in Quality Improvement: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Carl A. Patow, Kelly Karpovich, Lee Ann Riesenberg, Joseph Jaeger, Joel C. Rosenfeld, Mary Wittenbreer, Jamie S. Padmore

ACADEMIC MEDICINE (2009)

Review Education, Scientific Disciplines

Residents' and Attending Physicians' Handoffs: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Lee Ann Riesenberg, Jessica Leitzsch, Jaime L. Massucci, Joseph Jaeger, Joel C. Rosenfeld, Carl Patow, Jamie S. Padmore, Kelly P. Karpovich

ACADEMIC MEDICINE (2009)

Meeting Abstract Health Care Sciences & Services

The Impact of Fatigue on Burnout in Palliative Care Clinicians

Daniel Marchalik, Ross Krasnow, Jamie Padmore, Hunter Groninger

JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT (2018)

Meeting Abstract Health Care Sciences & Services

Frequent Reading for Pleasure is Associated with Decreased Burnout in Palliative Care Clinicians

Daniel Marchalik, Ross Krasnow, Jamie Padmore, Hunter Groninger

JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT (2018)

Article Urology & Nephrology

The Impact of Institutional Factors on Physician Burnout: A National Study of Urology Trainees

Daniel Marchalik, Jacob Brems, Ariel Rodriguez, John H. Lynch, Jamie Padmore, Lambros Stamatakis, Ross Krasnow

UROLOGY (2019)

No Data Available