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Reminder: Special Grand Rounds Nov. 27

25 Nov 2018

Speaker J. Bryan Sexton to address isolation, exhaustion, self-doubt



By: Ralph Yates, DO, Chief Medical Officer

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Ralph Yates DOColleagues: This is a reminder to please join me in welcoming — and learning from — J. Bryan Sexton, Ph.D. on Tuesday, Nov. 27, in one of the following three sessions in Wedel Auditorium, Building B basement.

  • 6:30 to 8 a.m. (breakfast provided)
  • 8:15 to 9:45 a.m.
  • 10 to 11:30 a.m.

Salem Health Hospitals & Clinics has taken the lead on understanding and addressing causes of burnout. In fact, to my knowledge, we are the only health care organization in the country that’s done medical staff focus groups about this issue — and for two years in a row. We’ve conducted 18 focus groups with 119 physicians.

Clinician burnout has three components: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and a decreased sense of personal accomplishment (M. Catherine Sargent, 2011). Early signs, as described by Quick et al., include declining professional performance and morale, physical and somatic symptoms and behavioral changes. More advanced signs include self-medication and self-doubt.

Through our focus groups, I’ve seen this often all boils down to loneliness and/or professional isolation. But how can that be? Clinicians often see 30 patients per day and interact with a whole host of other practitioners. I’ll tell you how. You, as clinicians, are being tasked with so many things that the simple human interactions between colleagues don’t take place as much as they used to. Often times, these interactions cease to exist altogether.

The attendance and response to our most recent town hall was overwhelming, and that tells me our medical staff want to be more engaged and are looking for guidance. I’m excited about this, and I want you to know that leadership is listening.

As part of executive leadership’s continuing commitment to enhance the lives of our medical staff, we’ve hired Dr. Sexton to speak with you about burnout and building workforce resilience. He is an associate professor and the director of Duke Patient Safety Center at Duke University Health System. Here’s a bit from his bio:

“Dr. Sexton has captured the wisdom of frontline caregivers through rigorous assessments of safety culture, teamwork, and workforce resilience. His research instruments have been used around the world in over 3000 hospitals, in 30 countries. His current R01 grant from NIH is a randomized clinical trial of resilience training.  He has studied teamwork, safety and resilience in high risk environments such as the commercial aviation cockpit, the operating room, and the intensive care unit, under funding from NIH, NASA, AHRQ, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Swiss National Science Foundation, and the Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz Foundation.

With specializations in organizational assessment, teamwork, survey development, and quantitative methods, he spends his time teaching, mentoring, conducting research, and finding practical ways of getting busy caregivers to do the right thing, by making it the easy thing to do.  He has found that results across industries, work settings, shifts, professions, and countries highlight a great deal about reliability in high-risk environments – specifically, “you are better off changing the situation, than trying to change human nature.”

This lecture will provide you the opportunity to learn about:

  1. How increases in stress at societal and patient care area levels impact care quality and self-care.
  2. Measuring care environment norms that enhance/hinder work-life balance.
  3. A simple exercise that enhances resilience, increases happiness and decreases depression.

I’m aware the world of medicine is increasingly complex. Our commitment to you is to see your lives improve. I look forward to seeing you there!