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Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed Services University
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Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems

Brian V. Reamy, MDColonel(ret),USAF,MC

Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family MedicineUniformed Services University

Page 2: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Introduction/Objectives

• Identify the different types of resident – faculty advisor & mentorship systems

• Explain the key developmental tasks of residents in training

• Identify positive and negative qualities in faculty advisors

• Describe the features of an “optimum” resident-faculty advisor system

Page 3: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Historical Context - 1982• Borus & Groves: “Training Supervision as a Separate Faculty

Role” Am J Psychiatry 1982;139(10):1339-42.

Page 4: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Historical Context

• “Training supervision is a longitudinal, nonclinically focused personal relationship between a faculty member and a resident for exploring the latter’s professional development. They … meet monthly over the 3-year residency.”

• “The training supervisor’s role is that of a non-evaluative senior colleague who orients and advises the resident and systematically reviews training progress and problems”

Page 5: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Who has a resident-faculty advisor system?

- How is it structured?- Who assigns residents?- Who makes changes when problems emerge?-Is it based on advising and evaluation or just advising?

Page 6: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Types of Advisor Systems

• Based on Clinical Care Teams• Self-selection • Proportional to faculty numbers

– Random assignment– Assigned by PG year group

• One faculty for each PG year group– Stay with year group thru residency program– Stay with their specific PG year group

Page 7: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Types: Clinical Care Teams

• Most common system• Example: 3 year PEDS Residency• 6-6-6 resident structure• 6 faculty + 1 PD + 1 Dept Chair

– Faculty physician + PG-3 + PG-2 + PG-1= care team– They cover each others patients during TDY’s/LV– This is also the academic advisor group

Page 8: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Types: Self-Selection

• Residents are told to select their advisor within 3 months of arrival– Can not select the PD– Rare in M.D. training– Common in Ph.D. programs

Page 9: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Types: Proportional

• If you have 24 residents and 8 faculty then each faculty member will get 3 advisees– Random/lottery or,– Each faculty takes one resident from each PGY or,– Assigned by PD based on research or clinical

interests, gender, request etc.

Page 10: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Types: Assigned to PG year groups

• Example: 3 year Internal Medicine Program• 8-8-8 resident complement; 16 faculty• One faculty (LTC Bezoar) has ALL PGY-1• One has ALL PGY-2…one has all PGY-3• 2 variations:

– LTC Bezoar stays with his year group x 3 years or,– LTC Bezoar is always the PG-1 faculty advisor

Page 11: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Advantages/Disadvantages TYPE ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES

Clinical Care Teams Faculty learn more about resident’s clinical practice

TDY’s & deployments can make advising difficult

Self-selection Potential for better relationships

Some residents never actually choose…

Proportional/random Perception of fairness enhanced

May end up w/ some dysfunctional pairings

1 Faculty/PGY – follows residents thru program

Faculty REALLY knows the residents & can facilitate improvements

Big faculty workload. Residents are “stuck” with the same faculty for length of training

1 Faculty/PGY - yr. specific The faculty REALLY knows the issues each specific year group faces and knows better how to problem-solve

Big faculty workload.

Page 12: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Key Issues w/each system

• Who does OER’s/OPR’s/FitReps?– Evaluation sabotages advising & mentoring!! It must exist –

but, separate from the advisor system.Many cites: Davis OC, Nakamura J. A proposed model for an optimal mentoring

environment for medical residents: a literature review. Acad Med. 2010;85:1060-1066

Sambunjak D et al. What makes a good mentor-mentee relationship? JCOM. 2010;17:152-154

• Distributing Faculty workload

• Who manages change requests?– Chief resident? Prog Dir?

Page 13: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Key Issues• Who gives out discipline?

– Should not be the advisor– Advisor should always wear a “white hat”– The Prog Director or Dept Chair should wear the

“black hat”

Page 14: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Key Developmental Tasks of Residents in Training

• Martin & O’Donnell. Resident Developmental Issues. Fam Med 1999;31:614-615.

• 10 Common Developmental Issues for Faculty advisors to facilitate

Page 15: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

10 Developmental Issues ISSUE

1 Do not assume all residents progress at the same pace

2 Be available to residents to listen to and explore their concerns

3 Model a balanced life

4 Be willing to be vulnerable and share how you learned from your mistakes

5 Model flexibility in the face of chaos and model how you deal w/ uncertainty

6 Promote paced change and continuous growth

7 Give positive feedback

8 Help residents move towards independence & life after residency training ends

9 Be patient with growth and changes

10 Set boundaries

Page 16: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Advisor/Mentor Qualities

• We have all experienced good & bad faculty advisors and mentors?– You can get better at this!– Many of the skills are those that serve you well in

your clinical work with patients.

– Reference: Sambunjak D et al. A Systematic Review of Qualitative Research on the Meaning and Characteristics of Mentoring in Academic Medicine. J Gen Intern Med. 2009;25:72-78.

Page 17: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Positive Qualities in a Faculty Advisor? ?

Page 18: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Positive Qualities in a Faculty Advisor

Most Important (literature support) Other positive qualities

ADVOCATE Competent

MENTOR Sounding Board

PLANS IMPROVEMENT “Bitch & Moan Sponge”

DELIVERS HONEST FEEDBACK Nurturing

EXPERIENCED Reality Check

AVAILABLE Aware

APPROACHABLE Doer

INSIGHTFUL Fair

GOOD LISTENER Dedicated

PROMOTES RESPECT Resourceful

ROLE MODEL Social Director

Page 19: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Negative QualitiesQualities to Avoid

Social Director

Disciplinarian

Plays Favorites

Unavailable

Overextended

Inconsistent

Intimidating

Cynical & Jaded

Evaluator & Rater

Page 20: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Optimum System

• Six core interactional foundations

1) Emotional safety2) Responsiveness3) Support4) Protégé-centeredness5) Respect6) Informality

Page 21: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

How would an optimum system appear?

• Evaluation is NOT confused with advising & mentoring

• Advisors who embrace the positive qualities• Equal distribution of faculty workload• Resident buy-in• Structure

– Fits w/ your institution & training environment– Thoughtfully selected

Page 22: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Optimum System

• Meeting Frequency & Guidelines– Informal “chats”: at least monthly– Formal faculty:advisee meetings every 3-4 mths– Need pre-planning ( initial vs. follow-up mtgs.)– Advisors need to get FULL faculty input– Avoid gossip sessions– Faculty need to keep records

Page 23: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Records

• Without records a faculty forgets or confuses• Confusion sabotages the faculty-advisee

relationship• Focus of the records is fourfold:

– Includes review of rotations & areas of concern– Includes faculty expectations & resident goals– Includes a Resident summative self-assessment– Ends with an Educational Rx

Page 24: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

CONCERNS YES/NO

NOT REVIEWED

CONCERNS YES/NO

NOT REVIEWED

1 . Conference Attendance

9. In-Training Exam

2. Time Management 10. Licensing3. Relationships with Colleagues

1 1. Research Project

4. Family/Personal Adjustment

12. PME/Officership

5. Life Balance 13. TDY Interests6. Procedures 14. AHLTA/Coding7. Chart Reviews 15. Reading/Study

8. Core Competencies 16. Teaching/Supervision

RESIDENT ADVISEMENTROTATIONS:

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

AREAS OF CONSIDERATIONComments regarding above topics:

ADVISEMENT RECORD EXAMPLE

Name:Date:

Page 25: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Unsatisfactory Marqinal Below Effective and Verv Fine Exceptionally OutstandingAverage Competent Fine

Performance Lacks May continue Satisfactorily A continuing Performs Extremelyfails to meet motivation, in program, meets the level of high outstandingly rare,standards of interest, and but stated performance in most Excels inacceptance. performance performance objectives. in most aspects of everything.Rehabilitation is limited. is below aspects of job. Initiative, Performs faris doubtful. Cannot standards. stated leadership beyond level

continue objectives. and of training.without personalitysubstantial are worthy ofimprovement. special

notice.

FACULTY EXPECTATIONS RESIDENT GOALS ____________

RESIDENT SELF-EVALUATION:

Educational Rx:

Advisor & Resident Signatures

Page 26: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Potential Quicksand

• Social• Friendship• Being a Clinician for advisee • Acting as a disciplinarian• Not involving the PD• Not proactively making time for meetings

Page 27: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Take Home Points

• 5 primary structures of faculty-resident advisor systems exist and you should thoughtfully select one.

• Evaluation sabotages advising & mentoring!! It must exist – but, separate from the advisor system.

• All residents work through 10 major developmental tasks at their own individual pace.

• There are advisor qualities to emulate and those to avoid. You can improve your skills as an advisor.

• An optimum system can be designed and put in place

Page 28: Resident – Faculty Advisor & Mentorship Systems Brian V. Reamy, MD Colonel(ret),USAF,MC Associate Dean for Faculty Professor of Family Medicine Uniformed.

Thanks & Questions