Abstract

Background: Acute stress impairs physician decision-making and clinical performance in resuscitations. Mental skills training, a component of the multistep, cognitive-behavioral technique of stress inoculation, modulates stress response in high-performance fields.

Objective: We assessed the effects of mental skills training on emergency medicine (EM) residents’ stress response in simulated resuscitations as well as residents’ perceptions of this intervention.

Methods: In this prospective, educational intervention trial, postgraduate year-2 EM residents in seven Chicago-area programs were randomly assigned to receive either stress inoculation training or not. One month prior to assessment, the intervention group received didactic training on the “Breathe, Talk, See, Focus” mental performance tool. A standardized, case-based simulation was used for assessment. We measured subjective stress response using the six-item short form of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-6). Objective stress response was measured through heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) monitoring. We measured subjects’ perceptions of the training via survey.

Results: Of 92 eligible residents, 61 participated (25 intervention; 36 control). There were no significant differences in mean pre-/post-case STAI-6 scores (-1.7 intervention, 0.4 control; p = 0.38) or mean HRV (-3.8 milliseconds [ms] intervention, -3.8 ms control; p = 0.58). Post-assessment surveys indicated that residents found this training relevant and important.

Conclusion: There was no difference in subjective or objective stress measures of EM resident stress response after a didactic, mental performance training session, although residents did value the training. More extensive or longitudinal stress inoculation curricula may provide benefit.

Details

Title
Effects of Brief Mental Skills Training on Emergency Medicine Residents’ Stress Response During a Simulated Resuscitation: A Prospective Randomized Trial
Author
Aronson, Matthew; Henderson, Timothy; Dodd, Kenneth W; Cirone, Michael; Putman, Margaret; Salzman, David; Lovell, Elise O; Williamson, Kelly
Section
Education Special Issue - Original Research (Limit 3000 words)
Publication year
2022
Publication date
2022
Publisher
University of California Digital Library - eScholarship
ISSN
1936900X
e-ISSN
19369018
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2866560892
Copyright
© 2022. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/