The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study

Background: Burnout is a critical issue that is increasingly prevalent among healthcare professionals. Several studies suggest that the decline in mental health and wellness begins in medical school. As such, medical schools across the United States have started to develop proactive approaches to m...

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Main Authors: Katelyn Edel, Michael Flanagan, Juan Qiu, Jacqueline Gardner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Regional Medical Campuses
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jrmc/article/view/3620
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spelling doaj-82af75e1aa11440ba11f29060a3b488d2021-05-13T17:18:05ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingJournal of Regional Medical Campuses2576-55582021-04-014210.24926/jrmc.v4i2.3620The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot StudyKatelyn Edel0Michael FlanaganJuan QiuJacqueline GardnerMedical Student Background: Burnout is a critical issue that is increasingly prevalent among healthcare professionals. Several studies suggest that the decline in mental health and wellness begins in medical school. As such, medical schools across the United States have started to develop proactive approaches to medical student wellness, often in the form of an organized curriculum focused on resilience, mindfulness, and stress-reduction. There is little research describing the implementation and refinement of a wellness curriculum at a small regional campus of an academic medical center. A regional campus represents a unique opportunity to develop a comprehensive wellness program, because of the flexibility of the curriculum and the small number of students. The Penn State College of Medicine University Park Campus sought to develop a wellness program specific to first year medical students (MS1s) and to create a companion program of inter-professional wellness exercises open to all teaching faculty and learners at our regional campus. Methods: The study was reviewed by the Penn State College of Medicine Institutional Review Board (STUDY00011390) and was granted “Exempt” status. Three components of the wellness curriculum were developed: a mandatory, semester-long curriculum for MS1s focused on professional development, a 10-session Tai Chi class accessible to faculty, staff and students, and a series of watercolor painting workshops accessible to faculty and students. Participants completed pre- and post-surveys to assess these interventions. Results: The participation rate for the optional Tai Chi and watercolor workshops was relatively low, with 20% of students attending. Most participants felt that medical schools should be responsible for offering wellness programs for students. The majority of students wanted optional wellness activities to be available, rather than mandatory sessions. Discussion: The information gathered from this pilot study will be used to develop a formal curriculum that is accessible, helpful, and convenient for all members of the regional campus community. In the future, it will be helpful to conduct a needs assessment to ascertain what kind of wellness offerings will be most successful among students, faculty, and staff of a regional medical campus. Conflicts of Interest: None. https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jrmc/article/view/3620WellnessMedical EducationBurnoutResilienceCurriculum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katelyn Edel
Michael Flanagan
Juan Qiu
Jacqueline Gardner
spellingShingle Katelyn Edel
Michael Flanagan
Juan Qiu
Jacqueline Gardner
The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
Journal of Regional Medical Campuses
Wellness
Medical Education
Burnout
Resilience
Curriculum
author_facet Katelyn Edel
Michael Flanagan
Juan Qiu
Jacqueline Gardner
author_sort Katelyn Edel
title The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
title_short The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
title_full The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
title_fullStr The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed The Development of a Wellness Curriculum at a New Regional Campus: A Pilot Study
title_sort development of a wellness curriculum at a new regional campus: a pilot study
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series Journal of Regional Medical Campuses
issn 2576-5558
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Background: Burnout is a critical issue that is increasingly prevalent among healthcare professionals. Several studies suggest that the decline in mental health and wellness begins in medical school. As such, medical schools across the United States have started to develop proactive approaches to medical student wellness, often in the form of an organized curriculum focused on resilience, mindfulness, and stress-reduction. There is little research describing the implementation and refinement of a wellness curriculum at a small regional campus of an academic medical center. A regional campus represents a unique opportunity to develop a comprehensive wellness program, because of the flexibility of the curriculum and the small number of students. The Penn State College of Medicine University Park Campus sought to develop a wellness program specific to first year medical students (MS1s) and to create a companion program of inter-professional wellness exercises open to all teaching faculty and learners at our regional campus. Methods: The study was reviewed by the Penn State College of Medicine Institutional Review Board (STUDY00011390) and was granted “Exempt” status. Three components of the wellness curriculum were developed: a mandatory, semester-long curriculum for MS1s focused on professional development, a 10-session Tai Chi class accessible to faculty, staff and students, and a series of watercolor painting workshops accessible to faculty and students. Participants completed pre- and post-surveys to assess these interventions. Results: The participation rate for the optional Tai Chi and watercolor workshops was relatively low, with 20% of students attending. Most participants felt that medical schools should be responsible for offering wellness programs for students. The majority of students wanted optional wellness activities to be available, rather than mandatory sessions. Discussion: The information gathered from this pilot study will be used to develop a formal curriculum that is accessible, helpful, and convenient for all members of the regional campus community. In the future, it will be helpful to conduct a needs assessment to ascertain what kind of wellness offerings will be most successful among students, faculty, and staff of a regional medical campus. Conflicts of Interest: None.
topic Wellness
Medical Education
Burnout
Resilience
Curriculum
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jrmc/article/view/3620
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