Background: Poor personal financial health has been linked to key components of health including burnout, substance abuse, and worsening personal relationships. Understanding the state of resident financial health is key to improving their overall well-being.
Study Design: A secondary analysis of a survey of New England general surgery residents was performed to understand their financial well-being.
Background: Surgical culture has shifted to recognize the importance of resident well-being. This is the first study to longitudinally track regional surgical resident well-being over 5 years.
Study Design: An anonymous cross-sectional, multi-institutional survey of New England general surgery residents using novel and published instruments to create three domains: health maintenance, burnout, and work environment.
Background: The medical community has increasingly embraced social media for a variety of purposes, including trainee education, research dissemination, professional networking, and recruitment of trainees and faculty. Platform choice and usage patterns appear to vary by specialty and purpose, but few studies comprehensively assess programs' social media presence. Prior studies assessed general surgery departments' Twitter use but omitted additional social media platforms and residency-specific accounts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Our primary objective was to understand residents' baseline comfort with end-of-life (EOL) communication and management and to compare this with their comfort after completion of their surgical intensive care unit (SICU) rotation. We also evaluated the association between prior training with perceived level of comfort with EOL issues, and whether the resident believed in the concept of a "better death."
Design, Setting, Participants: As a quality improvement initiative, we conducted surveys of trainees before and after their rotation in the Yale New Haven Hospital SICU.