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Clinical Trial Summary

Coaching is used in business and many other career paths to help the individual define and create their own goals and strategies for achieving those goals. In 2017 the investigators began to investigate the impact of coaching compared to non-coached peers in a randomized trial among non-internal medicine residency programs and internal medicine subspecialty fellowship to understand the impact of this program and its generalizability. Data from all these studies has suggested that coaching is effective in allowing trainees to understand their development over time, find meaning and purpose in their work, and identify their strengths and how to use these to overcome challenges and stressors. Additionally, there is a benefit to the coaches themselves, who can connect with other faculty coaches in a rewarding way, that provides faculty development in leadership development and positive psychology, and space to interact with a group of like-minded physicians. From the work the investigators have done with housestaff through the MGH Professional Development Coaching Program we have seen a tremendous interest from faculty members for access to similar services. Prior studies show improvement in faculty burnout and engagement at work through small-group sessions focused on reducing distress and promoting well-being. The investigators have also seen that while the training of novice coaches in positive psychology is sufficient to begin crucial conversations about drivers of well-being, the need for more in-depth coaching with certified coaches exists. The goal of this project is to expand coaching to MGH faculty members and provide more in-depth training for coaches through the International Federation of Coaching, through the Wellcoaches Coach Training Program. This is a unique approach to professional development within the field of medicine that has not yet been employed or studied. There was a recent publication of professional coaches hired outside of the field for faculty development, but there has been no training of medical colleagues with professional coaching skills. This has the potential to provide new data for the field and become a sustainable intervention for MGH in addressing ongoing professional development for our faculty and the burnout epidemic. Finally, this can serve as model for implementation in other institutions.


Clinical Trial Description

Objectives: 1. Create space for periodic reflection and goal setting for MGPO faculty to visualize their career progress and trajectory. 2. Provide an avenue for MGPO faculty to be trained as professional peer coaches. 3. Maximize the potential for continued professional development for MGPO faculty. 4. Improve burnout, professional fulfillment, resilience, and self-efficacy for MGPO faculty by re-inforcing coping skills and strengths. 5. Evaluate whether professional development coaching by trained faculty peer coaches reduces burnout, improves emotional well-being and improves professional fulfillment in MGPO faculty coaches. Hypothesis: MGPO Faculty will benefit from a Professional Development Coaching Program in the following ways: 1. A Professional Development Coaching Program, will improve faculty well-being, compared to non-coached controls. 2. A Professional Development Coaching Program will improve faculty workplace satisfaction, compared to non-coached controls. 3. A Professional Development Coaching Program will decrease burnout for faculty participants and faculty coaches and improve their resiliency by allowing them to visualize their accomplish-ments, improve their response to stress of uncertainty, and decrease emotional exhaustion, com-pared to controls. 4. A Professional Development Coaching Program will improve faculty coach well-being, com-pared to non-coach controls. III. SUBJECT SELECTION 1. Inclusion/exclusion criteria Inclusion criteria for faculty participants to receive coaching: faculty within the Mass General Physicians Organization (MGPO), no specific age range, screening based on self-referral through email Inclusion criteria for faculty participants to become a coach: faculty within the MGPO, no specific age range, screening based on self-referral and information provided in a standard application assessing motivation to become a faculty coach 2. Source of subjects and recruitment methods MGPO Faculty will be sent an email to make them aware of the program for voluntary enrollment. It will be clearly described that their participation is not mandatory. IV. SUBJECT ENROLLMENT 1. Methods of enrollment, including procedures for patient registration and/or randomization MGPO Faculty will be sent an email to make them aware of the program for voluntary enrollment, including both the opportunity to receive coaching in the trial or to become a trained coach. These surveys will serve no evaluative purpose in their job performance. It will be clearly described that their participation is not mandatory. Participants interested in receiving coaching will be placed into 2 groups via simple randomization. Randomization will be carefully done to ensure gender and department other demographics are balanced between the groups. Participants interested in becoming a trained coach will fill out a short application of interest from which 15 individuals will be selected to participate in coach training. 2. Procedures for obtaining informed consent (including timing of consent process) Participants will be invited via email as described above. Details of the study will be included in the email. Electronic consent will be obtained upon declaring interest in the program, as well as in emails when surveys are sent out. 3. Treatment assignment, and randomization (if applicable) Randomization will place participants interested in receiving coaching in 2 groups, either coaching for 3 months, or usual mentoring and well-being practices that exist in their department and through MGH. Randomization will be carefully done to ensure gender and faculty department are balanced between the groups. At the 3 month mark these groups will switch and faculty that were randomized to usual mentoring will be assigned a trained faculty coach for an additional 3 months. Participants will have access to the biographies of trained coaches after being assigned to receive coaching in their respective groups and will be able to select a coach they feel best matches their needs pending coach availability. V. STUDY PROCEDURES 1. Study visits and parameters to be measured (e.g., laboratory tests, x-rays, and other testing) Participants will be enrolled and followed with data collection for 9 months. 3 months of that time will be spent with a professional development coach with a meeting lasting 30 minutes to 1 hour every 2 weeks. All data collection will be done via survey online at the specified time point. Each coaching session will occur over a secure media platform by Bongomedia. This platform has been adopted by leadership at MGH and will provide deidentified, anonymized contect of the coaching sessions for program leadership. Coaches and participants being coached will have the opportunity to opt out of use of this platform. 2. Drugs to be used (dose, method, schedule of administration, dose modifications, toxicities), include Toxicity Grading Scale (if applicable) N/A 3. Devices to be used N/A 4. Procedures/surgical interventions, etc. N/A 5. Data to be collected and when the data is to be collected Several previously validated survey tools will be utilized for data collection including the Professional Fulfillment Index, the Self Valuation Scale, the Ultrecht Work Engagement Scale, Abbreviated Maslach Burnout Inventory and a Negative Impact of Work on Relationships Scale. Data will be collected at enrollment, 3 months, 6 months and 9 months. All surveys will be filled out by both participants enrolled and randomized for coaching and by trained faculty coaches. These surveys will be sent at enrollment, 3 months, 6 months and 9 months. In addition, both groups will fill out an intervention assessment after sessions that will gather data on themes addressed in the sessions and how effective the sessions felt to the participant. Additionally, all sessions conducted on the Bongomedia platform will produce deidentified, anonymized content that will be aggregated for re-view. VI. BIOSTATISTICAL ANALYSIS 1. Specific data variables being collected for the study (e.g., data collection sheets). Demographic data including gender, number of years as faculty and department will be collected. Survey data will be collected based on scales previously noted. 2. Study endpoints We will survey the faculty with an assessment of the Professional Development Coaching Program at enrollment, 3 months, 6 months and 9 months. After the 9 month survey the study will be completed. 3. Statistical methods Assistance with statistical data analysis will be requested through the Department of Medicine. We will use two-sample t-tests or Wilcoxon rank sum test, whichever more appropriate to compare be-tween groups for the changes from baseline at the different time points for all metrics between the faculty coaches and faculty participants. We will include all subjects in the primary comparisons and explore subgroup analysis stratified by participant characteristics (sex, sub-specialty department) ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05036993
Study type Interventional
Source Massachusetts General Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 5, 2021
Completion date August 1, 2022

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