Paediatric anaesthesia
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2021
ReviewCoaching for the Pediatric Anesthesiologist: Becoming our Best Selves.
Anesthesiologists must balance demanding clinical workloads with career development goals. Leadership, conflict management, and other skills can improve medical outcomes, reduce stress at work, and increase career satisfaction. ⋯ This manuscript reviews the history and evidence basis for coaching, differentiates coaching from traditional mentorship, and presents some constructs of coaching and working with a coach. An example of a successful pilot program to disseminate coaching skills and support leadership growth among anesthesiologists, the Women's Empowerment and Leadership Initiative within the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia, is described.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2021
ReviewChallenges and Opportunities Facing Pediatric Anesthesia Providers in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs): India.
India is a vast, populous country with a huge variability in the standards of health care. While the cities have state of the art hospitals with trained doctors, rural areas where most of the population lives, have a severe shortage of resources. Children form nearly 40% of India's population, and there is a great demand for pediatric surgical and anesthesia services. ⋯ On the other hand, the dearth of anesthesiologists offers ample opportunities to serve the underserved, improve the safety and quality of perioperative care in the rural areas, and improve the self-image of the anesthesiologist. A paucity of data regarding anesthesia, surgery, and work-related issues makes writing an article like this very difficult. However, it highlights the need for professional bodies to take note of these facts and play an active role in encouraging documentation, data collection, and improving standards of teaching and practice.
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Burnout is a state of emotional and physical exhaustion associated with internal and external stressors. Drivers of burnout include the expectation that we as physicians place our patients first, ahead of our own self-care; that seeking help is a sign of weakness in the culture of medicine; practice inefficiencies, including those imposed by electronic medical records; and a lack of personal resilience suffered by many physicians. The costs of burnout are high, including a decrement in the quality of care, increased turnover, and physician suicide. ⋯ We can enhance our resilience with a variety of tools, including meditation and mindfulness practice. Fortunately, these practices are becoming more mainstream and readily available to us. This article will briefly review the problem of burnout, including drivers and costs, and then focus on meditation and mindfulness practices that we may embrace in order to become more resilient.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2021
ReviewWell-being Curriculum for Anesthesiology Residents: Development, Processes, and Preliminary Outcomes.
Physician burnout and healthcare worker stress are well-covered topics in both the medical and lay press. Burnout in physicians can start as early as medical school. Well-being initiatives, programming, and access to support for all medical professionals are of paramount importance. ⋯ This subcategory charges all residency and fellowship programs with establishing a curriculum in well-being. The development, execution, and evaluation of these programs are left to the individual institutions. In this paper, the development, processes, and preliminary outcomes of a resident well-being curriculum are presented.
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The purpose of this educational review was to describe the challenges that may face the anesthesiologist near the end of their career and to propose strategies that will enable the individual to continue to be a productive and valued member of their Department, both clinically and by other contributions.