J.Q. Young is professor, Department of Psychiatry, Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, New York; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2219-5657 .
K.A. Friedman is professor, Department of Medicine, Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, New York; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1980-1839 .
Acad Med. 2022 Mar 1;97(3S):S28-S34. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000004529.
To better prepare for potential future large-scale redeployments, this study examines quality of supervision and care as perceived by redeployed residents, fellows, and attendings during a COVID-19 surge.
During April and May 2020, attendings, fellows, and residents redeployed at 2 teaching hospitals were invited to participate in a survey, which included questions on respondents' prior experience; redeployed role; amount of supervision needed and received; and perceptions of quality of supervision, patient care, and interprofessional collaboration. Frequencies, means, and P values were calculated to compare perceptions by experience and trainee status. Narrative responses to 2 open-ended questions were independently coded; themes were constructed.
Overall, 152 of 297 (51.2%) individuals responded, including 64 of 142 attendings (45.1%), 40 of 79 fellows (50.6%), and 48 of 76 residents (63.2%). Fellows and attendings, regardless of prior experience, perceived supervision as adequate. In contrast, experienced residents reported receiving more supervision than needed, while inexperienced residents reported receiving less supervision than needed and rated overall supervision as poor. Attendings, fellows, and experienced residents rated the overall quality of care as acceptable to good, whereas inexperienced residents perceived overall quality of care as worse to much worse, particularly when compared with baseline.
Narrative themes indicated that the quality of supervision and care was buffered by strong camaraderie, a culture of informal consultation, team composition (mixing experienced with inexperienced), and clinical decision aids. The markedly negative view of inexperienced residents suggests a higher risk for disillusionment, perhaps even moral injury, during future redeployments. Implications for planning are explored.
为了更好地为未来可能发生的大规模重新部署做准备,本研究调查了 COVID-19 疫情期间,重新部署的住院医师、研究员和主治医生对监管和护理质量的看法。
在 2020 年 4 月和 5 月期间,邀请 2 所教学医院的主治医生、研究员和住院医师参加一项调查,调查内容包括受访者的先前经验、重新部署的角色、所需和接受的监督数量,以及对监督质量、患者护理和跨专业合作的看法。通过经验和培训生身份比较了感知的频率、平均值和 P 值。对 2 个开放式问题的叙述性回答进行了独立编码;构建了主题。
共有 297 名参与者中的 152 名(51.2%)做出了回应,其中包括 142 名主治医生中的 64 名(45.1%)、79 名研究员中的 40 名(50.6%)和 76 名住院医师中的 48 名(63.2%)。无论经验如何,研究员和主治医生都认为监督是充分的。相比之下,经验丰富的住院医师报告说接受的监督比需要的多,而经验不足的住院医师报告说接受的监督比需要的少,并对整体监督质量评价较差。主治医生、研究员和经验丰富的住院医师对整体护理质量的评价为可接受至良好,而经验不足的住院医师认为整体护理质量更差甚至更差,尤其是与基线相比。
叙述性主题表明,监督和护理质量受到强烈的同志情谊、非正式咨询文化、团队组成(混合有经验和无经验的人员)和临床决策辅助工具的缓冲。经验不足的住院医师的明显负面看法表明,在未来的重新部署中,他们可能更容易感到失望,甚至可能受到道德伤害。探讨了对规划的影响。