Wellness Strategy
Welcome to the wellness strategy and leadership page. Below are evidence-based documents that will help you understand the business case for investing in well-being. We highlight a wellness map so you can understand where your organization/department stands in relation to wellness, and the steps we can take to begin having a bigger impact on wellness outcomes.
A wellness map & vision
If we are going to move the dial on wellness, we must respond together. Like any destination, a map is very useful to know where we are and where we want to go and it can help us align with a strategy that moves us forward. The map below highlights what organizations need to have implemented to begin to make a moderate or high impact on wellness outcomes.
Article | The Business Case for investing in physician well-being
September 25, 2017 Journal of the American Medical Association - Internal Medicine
We know we are improving wellness when…
- Search and select committees recognize the institutions' values and pick leadership accordingly
- Structures are in place to manage challenges
- The values of the institution are known and embraced
- Mistreatment/racism/disruptive behavior decreases
- We nurture creativity/innovation and optimal patient outcomes/research
- We acknowledge our mistakes and where we can do better
- Burnout rates start to abate; more engaged learners and faculty
- Positive shifts in quality of life and professional satisfaction
Easy(ish) wins:
From the literature, the following areas will make a significant difference in the domains of wellness and burnout:
- Physicians who spend 20% of their professional effort focused on dimensions of work they find most meaningful are at a lower risk for burnout (Shanafelt et al, 2009)
- Leadership Development: Research has found a 1-point increase in leadership satisfaction decreases burnout by 3.3 and increases satisfaction by 9% (Shanafelt 2015)
- Change the conversation at divisional/annual reviews: Put wellness on the agenda for discussion every month
- Develop skills to identify and intervene with unwell colleagues
- Develop skills to manage difficult personalities
- Cultivate community at work
- Respond to colleagues experiencing “distress” - College complaints, lawsuits, medical errors, unexpected deaths, key transitions
- Peer support and coaching networks (department based)
Article | Impact of Organizational Leadership on Physician Burnout and Satisfaction
April 2015 Mayo Clinic Proceedings
Vision
It can be overwhelming to know where to start in relation to well-being, however recent research points to the top 7 key organization-wide approaches to foster effective unit-level efforts to improve clinician wellbeing:
- Establish a common organizational framework for action
- Appoint and support a unit well-being leader
- Assess the experience and unique needs of each unit and compare with benchmarks
- Integrate unit-level well-being improvement efforts with the organizational improvement infrastructure
- Create a consistent structure and process for work unit well-being interventions
- Foster progress in the work unit well-being journey by assessing work unit process metrics
- Consider the unit lens when assessing organizational progress on outcome metrics
Article | Executive Leadership and Physician Well-being: Nine Organizational Strategies to Promote Engagement and Reduce Burnout
January 2017 Mayo Clinic Proceedings