Practical Interventions to Enhance Resident Ownership of Patient Care

Objective In the modern training environment, some question whether trainees have the opportunity to develop ownership of patient care, which includes concepts such as advocacy, autonomy, commitment, communication, follow-through, knowledge about the patient, responsibility, and teamwork. Despite de...

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Published in:Academic psychiatry Vol. 42; no. 2; pp. 222 - 227
Main Authors: Soeprono, Thomas, Markman, Jesse, Grodesky, Michael, Cowley, Deborah
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 01-04-2018
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Objective In the modern training environment, some question whether trainees have the opportunity to develop ownership of patient care, which includes concepts such as advocacy, autonomy, commitment, communication, follow-through, knowledge about the patient, responsibility, and teamwork. Despite descriptions of what ownership is, there is little discussion of how to foster ownership during residency. The objective of this study was to solicit psychiatry resident and faculty perspectives on ways to enhance resident ownership in training. Methods Twenty-nine of 74 (39.2%) residents and 31 of 68 (45.6%) faculty members surveyed provided narrative responses to a voluntary, anonymous, electronic survey asking two structured, open-ended questions about what factors make it more or less likely that a resident will take “ownership” of patient care. Results The coding process produced four overarching categories of themes ( attending , resident , educational program , and environment ) that reflect domains for possible interventions to increase ownership, with conceptual guidance from the Theory of Planned Behavior . From these factors, the authors propose a number of practical yet theory-based interventions which include setting expectations, modeling, promoting autonomy, countertransference supervision, changing residency culture, and longer rotations. Conclusions These interventions address subjective norms, attitudes, perceived ability and control, environment, and actual resident abilities, all of which, according to the Theory of Planned Behavior, would be likely to influence patient care ownership. Future studies could develop curricula and examine the effectiveness of the interventions proposed here in reinforcing or developing ownership in physicians.
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ISSN:1042-9670
1545-7230
DOI:10.1007/s40596-017-0731-3