Surgeons as Educators A Guide for Academic Development and Teaching Excellence

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ACGME competencies, residents most commonly exhibit deficits in medical knowl-
edge, patient care, professionalism, and interpersonal skills and communication [ 1 ,
2 , 4 – 7 , 14 , 30 ]. Because most of our assessment instruments, milestone informa-
tion, and evaluations are either organized via ACGME competencies or specifically
mapped to them, this is a useful starting point for delineating behaviors of concern
and targeting assessment. An equally useful framework is to conceptualize deficits
as cognitive or non-cognitive, as outlined in Table 17.2. This model is more closely
tied to observable behaviors and lends itself more to designing a behavior-based
remediation program. More importantly, it draws attention to professionalism issues
that may not be remediable.


Contributing Factors


In order to succeed, it is up to the underperforming resident to demonstrate improve-
ment in the behaviors or skills of concern. However, deficits don’t arise in a vacuum,
and often underlying contributing factors can be identified for the performance
problems. If possible, targeting remediation interventions to the underlying cause
will maximize the chances of success. Common contributors and possible interven-
tions are listed in Table 17.3.
Consider this scenario:


Residency training has long been identified as a high-risk time for symptomatic
levels of stress, burnout, and depression. Between 22% and 43% of residents experi-
ence some level of depression during residency [ 31 – 33 ], and 50–75% suffer from
burnout [ 34 – 37 ]. Burnout and depression are not synonymous with performance
impairment, and indeed the prevalence of both in residents is much higher than the


Resident S received above-average faculty ratings throughout most of his
PGY1 year. During PGY2, you are noticing a downward trend of mostly aver-
age ratings with a smattering of below average. Your chief resident recently
came to you with concerns that Resident S seemed withdrawn and not quite as
on top of things. You’ve just received an incident report that Resident S failed
to follow up on a critical lab value for a patient.

Table 17.2 Cognitive vs. non-cognitive deficits


Cognitive

Non-cognitive
Professionalism Organizational
Knowledge base
Clinical reasoning and judgment
Clinical decision-making
Technical skills

Interpersonal conflicts
Dependability
Disruptive behaviors
Dishonesty
Misconduct

Time management
Multitasking
Level of organization

Adapted from Williams et al. [ 6 ], Tabby et al. [ 4 ], Audétat et al. [ 2 ]


17 Optimizing Success for the Underperforming Resident

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