Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic
ABSTRACT Background: Medical students experience high levels of psychological stress during clinical training. However, most medical curricula do not teach self-care skills. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted medical education causing increased distress among students. Aim: To report the implementation and impact of an eight-week multifaceted mindfulness-based self-care program on medical students’ distress and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. Material and Methods: One hundred twenty-three fourth-year medical students attended the program as part of a mandatory course from April to May 2020, during the rising phase of COVID-19 in Chile. They were evaluated using validated tests before and immediately after the program. The measures included burnout, dispositional mindfulness, perceived stress, traumatic stress reactions, general well-being, resilience, and stress coping strategies. Results: Burnout prevalence decreased from 48% to 24%, whereas students with high dispositional mindfulness increased from 25% to 44%. Burnout reduction was mostly due to decreased emotional exhaustion. Additionally, students reported lower levels of stress, self-blaming, and traumatic stress reactions alongside an increased use of active coping strategies and resilience levels after the program. Conclusions: A formal educational intervention, teaching self-awareness and self-regulation skills can help reduce medical students’ distress and promote their well-being even amidst a pandemic.
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Sociedad Médica de Santiago
2021
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oai:scielo:S0034-988720210006008462021-11-03Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemicZúñiga,DenisseTorres-Sahli,ManuelNitsche,PíaEcheverría,GuadalupePedrals,NuriaGrassi,BrunoCisternas,MarcelaRigotti,AttilioBitran,Marcela COVID-19 Mindfulness Self Care Students, Medical ABSTRACT Background: Medical students experience high levels of psychological stress during clinical training. However, most medical curricula do not teach self-care skills. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted medical education causing increased distress among students. Aim: To report the implementation and impact of an eight-week multifaceted mindfulness-based self-care program on medical students’ distress and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. Material and Methods: One hundred twenty-three fourth-year medical students attended the program as part of a mandatory course from April to May 2020, during the rising phase of COVID-19 in Chile. They were evaluated using validated tests before and immediately after the program. The measures included burnout, dispositional mindfulness, perceived stress, traumatic stress reactions, general well-being, resilience, and stress coping strategies. Results: Burnout prevalence decreased from 48% to 24%, whereas students with high dispositional mindfulness increased from 25% to 44%. Burnout reduction was mostly due to decreased emotional exhaustion. Additionally, students reported lower levels of stress, self-blaming, and traumatic stress reactions alongside an increased use of active coping strategies and resilience levels after the program. Conclusions: A formal educational intervention, teaching self-awareness and self-regulation skills can help reduce medical students’ distress and promote their well-being even amidst a pandemic.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad Médica de SantiagoRevista médica de Chile v.149 n.6 20212021-06-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98872021000600846en10.4067/s0034-98872021000600846 |
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Zúñiga,Denisse Torres-Sahli,Manuel Nitsche,Pía Echeverría,Guadalupe Pedrals,Nuria Grassi,Bruno Cisternas,Marcela Rigotti,Attilio Bitran,Marcela |
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Zúñiga,Denisse Torres-Sahli,Manuel Nitsche,Pía Echeverría,Guadalupe Pedrals,Nuria Grassi,Bruno Cisternas,Marcela Rigotti,Attilio Bitran,Marcela Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
author_facet |
Zúñiga,Denisse Torres-Sahli,Manuel Nitsche,Pía Echeverría,Guadalupe Pedrals,Nuria Grassi,Bruno Cisternas,Marcela Rigotti,Attilio Bitran,Marcela |
author_sort |
Zúñiga,Denisse |
title |
Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
title_short |
Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
title_full |
Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
title_fullStr |
Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the COVID-19 pandemic |
title_sort |
reduced burnout and higher mindfulness in medical students after a self-care program during the covid-19 pandemic |
description |
ABSTRACT Background: Medical students experience high levels of psychological stress during clinical training. However, most medical curricula do not teach self-care skills. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted medical education causing increased distress among students. Aim: To report the implementation and impact of an eight-week multifaceted mindfulness-based self-care program on medical students’ distress and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. Material and Methods: One hundred twenty-three fourth-year medical students attended the program as part of a mandatory course from April to May 2020, during the rising phase of COVID-19 in Chile. They were evaluated using validated tests before and immediately after the program. The measures included burnout, dispositional mindfulness, perceived stress, traumatic stress reactions, general well-being, resilience, and stress coping strategies. Results: Burnout prevalence decreased from 48% to 24%, whereas students with high dispositional mindfulness increased from 25% to 44%. Burnout reduction was mostly due to decreased emotional exhaustion. Additionally, students reported lower levels of stress, self-blaming, and traumatic stress reactions alongside an increased use of active coping strategies and resilience levels after the program. Conclusions: A formal educational intervention, teaching self-awareness and self-regulation skills can help reduce medical students’ distress and promote their well-being even amidst a pandemic. |
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Sociedad Médica de Santiago |
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2021 |
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http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-98872021000600846 |
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