170 likes | 322 Views
The role of Coach in the Leadership Preventive Medicine Residency. Dominic F. Geffken, MD, MPH ACPM February 24, 2006. The Setting. The Setting. Concord Hospital Community hospital Approx. 240 beds NH-Dartmouth Family Practice Residency Unopposed FP residency-8-8-8
E N D
The role of Coach in the Leadership Preventive Medicine Residency Dominic F. Geffken, MD, MPH ACPM February 24, 2006
The Setting • Concord Hospital • Community hospital • Approx. 240 beds • NH-Dartmouth Family Practice Residency • Unopposed FP residency-8-8-8 • Combined Family Practice/ Leadership Preventive Medicine Residency • Leadership Preventive Medicine Residency • Based at Dartmouth/CECS
The Setting • The Capital Region Family Health Center • Approx 17,000 patients, safety net health center for the region • Concord and Hillsboro • FP/LPMR Residents continuity clinic • The local setting for quality improvement projects
Institutional Support • Concord Hospital • The leaders and managers view the LPMR residents as adding value to the organization • The Concord Hospital Practicum Review Committee (PRC) reviews resident quality improvement initiatives
The Setting • The LPMR Resident • LPMR Practicum: the resident meets with PRC to review quality improvement proposal • Conceptual • Approval • Report on progress • Final report
The Role of the Coach • The Coach is a faculty member in the same department as the LPMR resident. • Coaches model skills in • Patient care • Teaching/advising/professional development • Project development/management /publication • Leadership of improvement
The Role of the Coach • Transformational Learning • Mentor and guide • Most significant learning comes from challenges • Need to let resident stumble sometimes, but then process what occurred and ways to move forward
The Role of the Coach Preparing for the Practicum • The LPMR residents: come with many ideas/high levels of energy • Coach: help focus the ideas/energy into quality improvement project that is achievable and relevant
The Role of the Coach • Preparing for the PRC • Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse • Coach reminds resident of perspectives of different PRC members
The Role of the Coach After Initial Approval of Practicum • Maintain the timeline of the initiative • Regular meetings with resident to review successes and challenges • Coach through organization dynamic experiences (organization politics, group dynamics, diffusion of innovation)
The Role of the Coach Support for the coach • Regular meetings with local coaches and educators • Regular meetings with all coaches at Dartmouth
The Role of the Coach Lessons learned • Transformational learning requires that the coach and learner have some struggle • The coach may learn as much as the resident in the process • Support and supervision is necessary for the coach as well as learner
The Role of the Coach Coaching does not end after LPMR. • The hope is that we are developing a lifelong coaching/mentoring relationship that will continue during the learner’s professional career
Thank you Dominic F. Geffken, MD, MPH NH-Dartmouth Family Practice Residency Dgeffken@crhc.org