ORIGINAL ARTICLES

A Longitudinal Assessment of Resident and New Graduate Well-Being According to Length of Training: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot in Family Medicine

Mark A. Johnson, MD | Patricia A. Carney, PhD, MS | Annie Ericson, MA | Briana Money, DO | Suki Tepperberg, MD, MPH | Nicholas Weida, MD | Jennifer Somers, MD | Jennifer Romeu, MD

Fam Med.

Published: 4/15/2024 | DOI: 10.22454/FamMed.2024.990826

Abstract

Background & Objectives: No prior studies have examined how length of training may influence wellness. As part of the Length of Training Pilot (LoTP), we explored resident and new graduate well-being according to program year and length of training in 3- and 4-year family medicine residency training programs.

Methods: Two surveys captured data included in these analyses. One was a resident survey that included the Mayo Clinic physician-expanded Well-Being Index (eWBI) administered annually during the In-Training Examination (2014–2019). The second was administered to graduates 1 year after completion of training between 2016 and 2022 and included the same well-being questions. Response rates ranged between 77.7% and 96.8%.

Results: The eWBI summary scores for burnout were highest in postgraduate year 1 (PGY1) and did not differ statistically according to length of training (PGY1: 2.02 in 3-year [3YR] programs vs 1.93 in 4-year [4YR] programs, P=.55; postgraduate year 2 [PGY2]: 2.42 in 3YR programs vs 2.38 in 4YR programs, P=.83; postgraduate year 3 [PGY3]: 2.18 in 3YR programs vs 2.28 in 4YR programs, P=.59; and 2.34 in postgraduate year 4 [PGY4] for those in 4YR programs), though some statistical differences were noted for three items. New graduates’ eWBI summary scores before the COVID-19 pandemic were 1.77 among 3YR graduates and 1.66 among 4YR graduates (P=.59). These scores were higher during COVID-19 at 1.89 for 3YR graduates and 2.02 for 4YR graduates (P=.62). Length of training was not associated with differences in well-being before or during COVID-19.

Conclusions: We found no associations between length of training and physician well-being during training or among new graduates before or during COVID-19.

INTRODUCTION

Resident wellness during training has been studied in many disciplines, including emergency medicine, pediatrics, internal medicine, psychiatry, surgery, anesthesia, and obstetrics/gynecology. 1-3 It also has been studied in family medicine (FM), 4, 5 revealing that scores on burnout (emotional exhaustion and depersonalization) increased between the start of residency and the start of year 2 of training and remained elevated at graduation. Other measures of well-being, such as stress, life satisfaction, and affect, improved during the second and third years of residency, while depression, mindfulness, and gratitude remained stable. 4 An older study (2013) found that 23% of FM residents had scores consistent with depression risk, 13.7% had high emotional exhaustion, and nearly 24% were highly depersonalized (eg, less time in nurturing relationships). 5 A recent systematic review of 16 articles found that physician burnout is associated with depression, anxiety, and suicidality. 6 Collectively these studies have raised ongoing concerns, leading the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) to launch a website in 2019 with resources designed for residents and faculty members to promote well-being, reduce stress, and prevent burnout. 7

More ongoing longitudinal research is needed to monitor stress and burnout, which have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. 8, 9-13 One area that has not been studied related to well-being is how length of training may affect it. The Length of Training Pilot Study (LoTP), which ran from 2013 to 2023 and involved 17 FM residency programs across the United States that were all in good standing with the ACGME, included a well-being assessment component so that we could determine the extent to which resident wellness might differ according to receipt of training for 3 years versus 4 years. Resident wellness data were available for years 2013 to 2019, and new graduate well-being data were available for 2020 to 2022. We could not have anticipated a global pandemic would occur during this study, but that yielded the opportunity to longitudinally assess resident well-being according to length of training as well as new FM new graduates’ well-being according to length of training, both before and during the pandemic.

METHODS

Length of Training Pilot Study

Several papers related to this study have been published, which can provide additional background. 14-20 Briefly, 17 residency programs participated in LoTP: seven 3-year (3YR) civilian programs, six 4-year (4YR) civilian programs, and four Navy programs. All were in good standing with the ACGME. We excluded Navy programs because their training setting and content differs from civilian programs. Navy physicians in training can be deployed after they complete their intern year, which disrupts their training, and the clinical care they provide on base is different from care provided by civilian programs. Curricular components and structures varied in the programs undertaking 4 years of training. Because one 4YR program was large in size (22-22-22), we matched it with two 3YR programs. In addition, four programs had required training length of 4 years and two programs had an optional fourth year. Evaluation activities were overseen by investigators in the Department of Family Medicine at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU). OHSU’s Institutional Review Board (IRB) granted an educational exemption to obtain data from study sites (IRB # 9770). In addition, all LoTP programs obtained local IRB review and approval.

Data Collection

Two surveys were used to capture data included in these analyses. One was an annual resident survey, which included well-being questions and was administered annually during the In-Training Examination held every November between 2014 and 2019. This survey included 34 variables to assess demographic and training information as well as nine validated questions from the Mayo Clinic physician-expanded Well-Being Index (eWBI), which has been validated in practicing physicians as well as medical students and residents. 21, 22 Seven of the nine items required a Yes/No response regarding symptoms of distress experienced over the past month, and the last two items used a seven-item scaled response regarding how often their work is meaningful to them and the extent that their work schedule leaves enough time for personal/family life (Scale: 1=very strongly agree; 2=strongly agree; 3=agree; 4=neutral; 5=disagree; 6=strongly disagree; 7=very strongly disagree).

The second survey, consisting of 160 items, was administered annually in May to graduates of FM residency training in the LoTP 1 year after completion of training. The graduate survey assessed several domains, including demographic and complete training information, clinical practice characteristics, well-being and career satisfaction, care delivery features, scope of practice, adequacy of family medicine training in the care of children and adults, and procedural scope of practice. This survey was administered between 2016 and 2022 and included the same well-being questions from the eWBI that the resident survey included. The resident survey response rate was 96.8%, and the graduate survey response rate was 77.8%.

Data Analyses

We first assessed the study data by calculating frequencies, means, standard deviations, medians, and ranges to determine whether we should use parametric or nonparametric tests. We assessed responses from postgraduate year 1 (PGY1), postgraduate year 2 (PGY2), and postgraduate year 3 (PGY3) according to whether residents trained in 3YR versus 4 YR programs. We assessed whether data differed according to calendar year; when we found no differences, we pooled the data according to program year. We also assessed whether data differed according to whether residents in 4YR programs completed their training in 3 years or 4 years because for two 4YR programs, completing a fourth year was optional. We found no differences and pooled the data according to whether programs offered 3 years of training versus 4 years.

We used eWBI scoring instructions in these analyses, 22 and thus we calculated frequencies and percentages for each of the seven individual variables to reflect respondents who reported “Yes” to having symptoms of burnout, depression, stress, fatigue, and mental and physical quality of life; according to scoring instructions, we calculated one point for a “Yes” response for each variable, indicating a possible high score of seven, which reflects the worst well-being. We summarized these variables to reflect an overall summary score. For the two scaled items, one reflecting meaning in work and the other reflecting satisfaction with work-life balance, response options of 1 or 2 (indicating a low level of meaning in work or poor work-life balance) had one point added to their score, while those who answered favorably with a response of 6 or 7 had one point subtracted from their score. For those with a neutral score, no adjustment was made. Thus, the total score for the eWBI could range from –2 to 9. 22 We assessed categorical variables using χ 2 and the Fisher exact test (when sample sizes were small). We assessed continuous variables using independent samples t tests. All tests were two-tailed with α set at 0.05 to determine statistical differences. Missingness of individual responses was minimal (<2%).

RESULTS

Participants were similar in terms of age, gender, race, and marital and parental status (Table 1 ). Participants in 3YR programs were more likely to be Hispanic compared to those in 4YR programs (12.7% vs 6.8%; P=.03). As reported elsewhere, the programs were similar in size and were university- or community-based. 20 Also, as reported elsewhere, community size, practice size, practice type, specialty mix, and practice in a federally designated underserved site did not differ between the two groups, and no differences were found in patient-centered medical home features comparing practices of the 3YR to the 4YR graduates. 23

When examining individual eWBI variables in PGY1 (Table 2 ), we found that residents in 3YR programs were more likely to report having fallen asleep while inactive in public places in the past month compared to residents in 4YR programs (27.5% vs 17.8%; P=.009). All other variables were similar among residents in 3YR and 4YR programs, including the seven-item eWBI summary score, which for PGY1 residents in 3YR programs was 2.27 compared to 2.76 for residents in 4YR programs (P=.76), and for the nine-item eWBI summary score (2.02 in 3YR programs and 1.93 in 4YR programs; P=.55). Among PGY2 residents, no statistical differences were found between 3YR and 4YR residents for any variables or summary eWBI scores (either seven-item or nine-item scores; Table 2); however, scores for six of the seven items increased during PGY2 for residents in 3YR programs, and all seven increased for residents in 4YR programs.

Among PGY3 residents, well-being scores were similar to PGY2 except that residents in 4YR programs reported being more worried that their work was hardening them emotionally compared to residents in 3YR programs (69.7% vs 56.5%; P=.003). In addition, more residents in 3YR programs reported that the things they had to do were piling up so high that they could not overcome them compared to residents in 4YR programs (47.6% vs 36.4%; P=.02), though neither the seven-item nor the nine-item eWBI summary scores differed according to length of training.

 When comparing new graduates from 3YR and 4YR programs, we found no statistical differences according to length of training for any variable or for either the seven-item or the nine-item eWBI summary scores. Scores were slightly higher, indicating less well-being, during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to the prepandemic period (Table 3 ).

DISCUSSION

The Length of Training Pilot in family medicine provides a unique dataset to compare wellness scores between residents who trained in 3YR and 4YR residency programs. Our findings showed that residency training is associated with high levels of stress, burnout, and emotional exhaustion, which increases between PGY1 and PGY2 and remains high in PGY3 and PGY4, including the fourth year for those receiving an extra year of training. These findings are consistent with those reported in a 2020 study by Ricker et al, 4 though the Ricker study did not include 4 years of training. We also found that summary well-being scores (eWBI) did not differ statistically among residents receiving 3 years compared to 4 years of training—a finding that persisted when we compared cohorts of residency graduates before the COVID-19 pandemic (2014–2019) and during it (2019–2022). In addition, residents across all training years indicated strong agreement that they find their work meaningful—another finding that did not differ according to length of training among residents or among graduates during the COVID-19 pandemic.

When examining individual variables, we found three that differed among residents receiving 3 years versus 4 years of training. The first was that PGY1 residents in 3YR training programs were more likely to report having fallen asleep while inactive in public places in the past month compared to PGY1 residents in 4YR programs. Perhaps the training launch in 3YR programs is more vigorous than in 4YR programs, such as having a higher concentration of inpatient rotations in the first year of residency in 3YR programs compared to 4YR programs, which affected sleep patterns. A systematic review published by Raj in 2016 assessed different scales to measure well-being in residents and noted that sleep deprivation was associated with all measures of distress. 24 Furthermore, although eWBI is the tool this study used to assess well-being, it is not the only scale that identifies sleep as a factor that impacts stress in residents. To promote well-being in residency, sleep deprivation must be addressed. While ACGME has taken steps to improve sleep in training (eg, work-hour limitations, shift length limits), there is clearly more to do. In fact, another narrative review paper published in 2022 found that interventions dedicated to improving sleep are varied, and studies are often limited. 25

Another difference was that during PGY3, 4YR program residents reported higher scores on their work, causing emotional hardening. Given the other strongly consistent results between 3YR and 4YR programs, we found this interesting though difficult to explain. Lastly, residents in 3YR programs reported a higher rate of feeling that things were piling up too high during PGY3. This finding may be due to residents approaching graduation and searching for jobs while simultaneously meeting the demands of residency training. This assumption is supported by the fact that residents in 4YR programs had a similar rate in their fourth year while they were preparing to enter the workforce. Nevertheless, differing scores in these three variables were not diverse enough to affect the eWBI summary scores across the two study groups.

The two reviews we cited 24, 25 provided other insights regarding detractors during training that affect resident well-being. One is insufficient time away from training. Our study did not specifically investigate this factor, but it could impact well-being in several ways that we did study. For example, feelings related to emotional hardening from work could potentially be improved if residents had more time away from their job to tend to their own health, whether that is more physical activity, sleep, or time to seek care for their health conditions. Raj 24 found that residents scoring above the median personal time availability reported more positive experiences and emotions, fewer negative experiences and emotions, higher career choice satisfaction, and less perceived stress. 25 Such detractors are multifactorial, somewhat subjective, and difficult to quantify. However, adequate sleep and time away from work appear to be interrelated, overarching themes that detract from resident wellness and thus deserve concerted efforts to study and improve. Interestingly, a study comparing residents’ and program directors’ perspectives on wellness curricula, 26 found that residents reported lower satisfaction with wellness program efforts and lower availability compared to program directors. This disparity between perspectives is troubling and suggests that more efforts are needed to create stronger cultures of well-being.

Strengths of this study include the number of programs that participated and the survey response rates from both residents in training (96.8%) and residency graduates (77.8%). In addition, the programs included in this study were diverse and varied from university programs to community programs. The demographics of the respondents were similar in each group, allowing for better direct comparison between the 3YR residents and the 4YR residents during training and after training. Despite these strengths, programs participating in the LoTP likely vary from other family medicine residencies, as noted in prior evaluations 16. Additionally, not all 4YR programs have the same structure; some are 3 years of training plus 1 optional year, and other programs are integrated 4 years for all residents, which could affect well-being. This variation could not be investigated because the study groups were too small to provide stable comparisons. As mentioned, two of the five 4YR training programs had an optional fourth year, meaning that some residents in 4YR programs graduated after 3 years of training. Thus, the study groups did suffer from some contamination. We discussed moving those residents into the 3YR study group but decided to retain the study design and use an intent-to-treat approach. Thirty-one residents fell into this category (11.6%). Lastly, because the LoTP is a pilot study, it was not powered to fully test hypotheses; we therefore cannot assume causal effects related to well-being and length of training. Rather, the number of respondents in our study and in our analysis was designed to decrease program variability, allowing us to explore hypotheses that may account for the few significant differences in well-being between 3YR and 4YR program trainees.

Another potential limitation of this study is the reliability of the well-being instrument that was used; many wellness scales have variability in predicting burnout. We used the modified physician eWBI developed by investigators at the Mayo Clinic. This tool can be used to help identify those at risk for burnout, depression, poor patient care, and retention; however, it is not necessarily diagnostic of those characteristics. 22

CONCLUSIONS

In conclusion, we found no associations between length of training and physician well-being during training or among new graduates before or during COVID-19, though the LoTP study was not powered to fully test hypotheses because it was exploratory in nature. Additional studies with larger sample sizes and more diverse representation of all residency training programs would be needed to validate whether the length of training had an impact on well-being and levels of burnout.

Financial Support

The Length of Training Pilot is sponsored by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and is funded by the American Board of Family Medicine Foundation.

References

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Lead Author

Mark A. Johnson, MD

Affiliations: Swedish Family Medicine - Ballard, Seattle, WA

Co-Authors

Patricia A. Carney, PhD, MS - School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR

Annie Ericson, MA - Oregon Department of Family Medicine, School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR

Briana Money, DO - North Colorado Family Medicine Residency Program, Banner Health, Banner Health, Greeley, CO

Suki Tepperberg, MD, MPH - Family Medicine Residency, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston, MA

Nicholas Weida, MD - Lawrence Family Medicine Residency Program, Lawrence, MA

Jennifer Somers, MD - Lawrence Family Medicine Residency Program, Lawrence, MA

Jennifer Romeu, MD - Family Medicine Residency Training Program, College of Medicine, Central Michigan University, Saginaw, MI

Corresponding Author

Patricia A. Carney, PhD, MS

Correspondence: School of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR

Email: carneyp@ohsu.edu

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