Impact of resident well-being and empathy on assessments of faculty physicians
- PMID: 19882191
- PMCID: PMC2811588
- DOI: 10.1007/s11606-009-1152-0
Impact of resident well-being and empathy on assessments of faculty physicians
Abstract
Background: Teaching effectiveness is an important criterion for promoting clinician-educators. However, the relationship between residents' psychological characteristics and their assessments of faculty physicians is unknown.
Objective: To determine whether residents' well-being and empathy influenced their assessments of faculty physicians.
Design, setting, and participants: We studied 1,191 assessments of 356 faculty physicians by 209 internal medicine residents at a large academic medical center from 2007 to 2008. A repeated measures design with multivariate generalized estimating equations was used to evaluate associations between resident well-being and empathy, and residents' assessments of faculty.
Measurements: Resident surveys included standardized measures of quality of life, burnout, depression, and empathy. Residents assessed faculty members' teaching performance with a validated 16-item instrument.
Results: 149 residents (71%) provided well-being, empathy, and assessment data. In multivariate models, faculty assessments from the previous year were the strongest predictor of current resident-of-faculty assessment scores. Residents' Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy (JSPE) scores were also associated with faculty assessments (beta = 0.0063, 95% CI = 0.0018-0.0108; p = .0061). On this 140-point, 20-item scale, a 10-point increase in empathy correlated with a 0.063-point increase in residents' assessments of faculty on a 5-point scale. There were no significant associations between residents' assessments of faculty and quality of life, burnout, or depression.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that residents' well-being does not influence their assessments of faculty physicians, thus supporting the trustworthiness of these assessments as a criterion for promoting clinician-educators. However, the association between residents' empathy and resident-of-faculty assessments suggests that faculty assessments may be modestly influenced by residents' intrinsic characteristics.
Comment in
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Resident well-being and clinical teaching assessments.J Gen Intern Med. 2010 Jul;25(7):644; author reply 645. doi: 10.1007/s11606-010-1333-x. J Gen Intern Med. 2010. PMID: 20440576 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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