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Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of the current study (PERSIST) is to 1) determine acceptability of an 8-session (16 week) group curriculum on personal resilience skills for residents in the Duke General Surgery Program, and 2) examine changes in professional fulfillment, depression symptomatology, anxiety symptomatology, and self-valuation, and positive wellbeing (flourishing) at the end of the program and 3-month follow-up compared to baseline, 3) examine performance on surgery training metrics compared to the mean performance of non-participants. Participants will be residents active in the Duke General Surgery Program. There will be one group of Junior Assistant Residents (JAR, N = 10) and one group of Senior Assistant Residents (SAR, N =10), which will be conducted separately. At baseline, all participants will complete questionnaires related personal resilience, including professional fulfillment (professional fulfillment, work exhaustion, interpersonal disengagement), depression symptoms, anxiety, symptoms, self-valuation, flourishing, and psychosocial working conditions. At post-treatment (end of session 8), participants will complete the baseline questionnaires (with the exception of psychosocial working conditions), as well as a questionnaire assessing acceptability of the group experience and content. The post-treatment questionnaires will be repeated as a 3-month follow-up. All study activities are considered low risk, and there the training is expected to have the benefit of teaching lasting skills to promote professional and personal resilience. To protect participant confidentiality, surgery staff and faculty will not have access linkage between study variables and participant identity.


Clinical Trial Description

The primary aims/objectives are to examine acceptability of the PERSIST intervention, and pre-post changes relevant to resident resilience, as operationalized in measures of personal and professional well-being. The investigators intend to enroll both Junior Assistant Residents (JAR) and Senior Assistant Residents (SAR) cohorts in a combined sample; and secondarily results by group. The secondary objective is to examine whether participation in PERSIST is associated with better training and safety outcomes compared to resident who do not participate. Aim 1: Determine acceptability of an 8-session PERSIST intervention for General Surgery residents. Aim 2: Assess change on measures of personal and professional well-being following an 8 session PERSIST intervention for General Surgery residents. The investigators anticipate that individuals completing PERSIST will show improvement in professional fulfillment, depression symptoms, anxiety symptoms, flourishing, and self-valuation at post-treatment and 3-month follow up compared to baseline. Aim 3: Compare training and safety outcomes of PERSIST participants compared to non-participants. PERSIST is adapted from empirically validated treatment of negative affect and low positive emotion. Skills Training 1 includes content across 4 sessions on 1) understanding emotions, 2) present-moment emotional awareness, 3) cognitive flexibility, and 4) countering avoidant and emotion-driven responses. Skills Training 2 includes content across 4 sessions on a) translating values to action, b) lower barriers to action, c) countering avoidance, and d) maintaining actions that support personal resilience. The classes will occur every other Wednesday, resulting in a 16-week intervention period. The investigators plan to collect multiple sources of information on acceptability. Primarily this will be via questionnaire rating of the experience and value of the 8 content topics in PERSIST. Additionally, the investigators will review and categorize response from open ended content, track participant attendance over the duration of the intervention, and document any feasibility issues related to recruitment, attendance, or dissemination of content. All measures related to well-being assessed at pre-intervention, post-intervention, and 3-month follow up. ;


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NCT number NCT06139614
Study type Interventional
Source Duke University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 16, 2023
Completion date March 31, 2024