Enhanced Stress Resilience Training in Surgeons: Iterative Adaptation and Biopsychosocial Effects in 2 Small Randomized Trials.

TitleEnhanced Stress Resilience Training in Surgeons: Iterative Adaptation and Biopsychosocial Effects in 2 Small Randomized Trials.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsLebares, CC, Coaston, TN, Delucchi, KL, Guvva, EV, Shen, WT, Staffaroni, AM, Kramer, JH, Epel, ES, Hecht, FM, Ascher, NL, Harris, HW, Cole, SW
JournalAnn Surg
Volume273
Issue3
Pagination424-432
Date Published2021 Mar 01
ISSN1528-1140
KeywordsAdaptation, Physiological, Adult, Burnout, Professional, Education, Medical, Graduate, Female, General Surgery, Humans, Internship and Residency, Male, Occupational Stress, Pilot Projects, Resilience, Psychological, Surgeons
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of ESRT (an iteratively adapted and tailored MBI) on perceived stress, executive cognitive function, psychosocial well-being (ie, burnout, mindfulness), and pro-inflammatory gene expression in surgical (ESRT-1) and mixed specialty (ESRT-2) PGY-1 volunteers.

SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND AND DATA: Tailored MBIs have proven beneficial in multiple high-stress and high-performance populations. In surgeons, tailored MBIs have been shown to be feasible and potentially beneficial, but whether mindfulness-based cognitive training can improve perceived stress, executive function, well-being or physiological distress in surgical and nonsurgical trainees is unknown.

METHODS: In 2 small single-institution randomized clinical trials, ESRT, a tailored mindfulness-based cognitive training program, was administered and iteratively adapted for first-year surgical (ESRT-1, 8 weekly, 2-hour classes, n = 44) and mixed specialty (ESRT-2, 6 weekly, 90-minute classes, n = 45) resident trainees. Primary and secondary outcomes were, respectively, perceived stress and executive function. Other prespecified outcomes were burnout (assessed via Maslach Burnout Inventory), mindfulness (assessed via Cognitive Affective Mindfulness Scale - Revised), and pro-inflammatory gene expression (assessed through the leukocyte transcriptome profile "conserved transcriptional response to adversity").

RESULTS: Neither version of ESRT appeared to affect perceived stress. Higher executive function and mindfulness scores were seen in ESRT-1, and lower emotional exhaustion and depersonalization scores in ESRT-2, at pre-/postintervention and/or 50-week follow-up (ESRT-1) or at 32-week follow-up (ESRT-2), compared to controls. Pooled analysis of both trials found ESRT-treated participants had reduced pro-inflammatory RNA expression compared to controls.

CONCLUSIONS: This pilot work suggests ESRT can variably benefit executive function, burnout, and physiologic distress in PGY-1 trainees, with potential for tailoring to optimize effects.

DOI10.1097/SLA.0000000000004145
Alternate JournalAnn Surg
PubMed ID32773637
PubMed Central IDPMC7863698
Grant ListK24 AT007827 / AT / NCCIH NIH HHS / United States
P30 AG062422 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States