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Mentor: Roles, Challenges, and Skills Development Jacob Prunuske, MD, MSPH Amy Prunuske, PhD Margit Chadwell, MD Christopher LaJeunesse Suzanne Minor, MD Kathryn Trayes, MD
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Disclosures None of the presenters have any conflict of interest with respect to this presentation
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Objectives 1.Challenges 2.Relationships 3.Evaluation
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Agenda Introductions Value Qualities & Skills Barriers Practice Evaluation Wrap
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Introductions Name Institution Why you chose this session
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VALUE OF MENTORSHIP Dr. Jacob Prunuske
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Mentoring “...experienced, highly regarded, empathetic person (mentor) guides another individual (mentee) in the development and re- examination of their own ideas, learning, and personal and professional development.” Frei 2010
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Value of Mentorship Professionalism development Research participation & productivity Career planning Overall well-being Support for individuals underrepresented in medicine Aagaard 2003. Zink 2007. Macaulay 2007. Kosoko-Lasaki 2006. Murr 2002. Dorrance 2008. Zier 2006. Coates 2008. Kalet 2007, 2001.
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QUALITIES & SKILLS OF EFFECTIVE MENTORS Dr. Suzanne Minor
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Qualities & Skills of Effective Mentors Groups of four 10 minutes, then share with larger group Develop a list: –Personal characteristics –Behaviors –Skills –Others
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Group Discussion What characteristics did your group identify? Qualities & Skills of Effective Mentors
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Mentor Qualities & Skills Consistent availability & engagement Balance guidance & freedom Supportive atmosphere & resources Constructive feedback Individual interest in mentee Nakamura, Shernoff 2009
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Mentor-Mentee Interactions Emotional safety Support Protégé [mentee]-centeredness Informality Responsiveness Respect
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Mentor Qualities & Skills Clear expectations for mentoring role Avoid complaining about logistics that are out of students’ control Honesty Budget appropriate time Recognize professional boundaries
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Mentors Should Encourage Mentee Reflection Self Clinical surroundings Structure of medical education Social determinants of health
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Female Student Perspectives Optimal mentoring includes... –Shared values, Trust, Personal Connection Relation more important than gender concordance Gender-based assumptions & stereotypes affect mentoring Gender-based power dynamics influence what students disclose Levine 2013
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MENTORING CHALLENGES Dr. Kathryn Trayes
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What Challenges do you, your colleagues, and your institution face?
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Common Challenges Faculty interest, skill, time, engagement Institutional support, resources Cultural, gender, generational differences Student interest, time, engagement, not wanting to ‘bother’ mentor, or seem needy or insecure
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Challenges/Barriers Mentor conflict of interest Mismatched expectations Acting to please mentor not achieve own goals Personality differences Poor communication External factors –changing health systems, politics, finances
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Overcoming Barriers Safe, welcoming environment Clear communication Framework/checklist to guide meetings –Personal goals, research, career planning, international experiences, electives, work-life balance, medical issues, others... Defined action items Mentor support, faculty development Teach ability to disagree without being disagreeable
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MENTORING TOOL Dr. Margit Chadwell
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Mentoring Tool Available on MedEdPORTALMedEdPORTAL
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MENTORING SCENARIOS Christopher LaJeunesse
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Practice Scenarios – Groups of 8 –Describe your own or use one of ours Mentoring Challenges Strategies to overcome those challenges
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MENTORING PROGRAMS Dr. Jacob Prunuske
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Ways Institutions Support Effective Mentoring Identified criteria for selecting mentors Incentives for motivating faculty mentors Assignment of mentors-mentee pairing Single or multiple mentors Keyser 2008
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Value of Institutional Support Increased trust Improved morale Improved retention Enhanced organizational commitment Zachary 2005
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Traditional Mentoring Dyad (1:1) Most common in literature Experienced to novice Single viewpoint May be too hierarchical, less mutually supportive Some individuals (eg women, minorities) may be less likely to identify or identify with a mentor
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Alternative Models Co-mentoring (multiple perspectives) Peer mentoring –Value associated with social support –Best with faculty guidance, eg Healer’s Art Group mentoring Layered mentoring Choice vs Assigned
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Informal Mentoring Perspectives
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WHAT EVIDENCE WOULD TELL YOU YOUR PROGRAM IS WORKING? Dr. Amy Prunuske
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What evidence would tell you your program is working? Student perspectives Faculty perspectives Institutional resource use Board scores Attrition and graduation rates Graduate career choices, match success, practice choices
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Objectives 1.Challenges 2.Relationships 3.Evaluation
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Thank You! Jacob Prunuske, MD, MSPH Amy Prunuske, PhD Margit Chadwell, MD Christopher LaJeunesse Suzanne Minor, MD Kathryn Trayes, MD Please evaluate this session at: stfm.org/sessionevaluation
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