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Wellness is NOT Yoga and Granola with Dr. Tait Shanafelt

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Manage episode 320202008 series 3315507
Content provided by Caleb Sokolowski & Peter Dimitrion, Caleb Sokolowski, and Peter Dimitrion. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Caleb Sokolowski & Peter Dimitrion, Caleb Sokolowski, and Peter Dimitrion or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode we interview Dr. Tait Shanafelt. Dr. Shanafelt is a Jeanie and Stewart Ritchie Professor of Medicine, Chief Wellness Officer, and associate dean at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is the co-author, with one of our former guests Steven Swenson, of “Mayo Clinic Strategies to Reduce Burnout”. He is credited for bringing physician-burnout to the forefront of healthcare discussion. He is a leader in the field of physician wellness and healthcare team efficiency. He has published numerous works in the field of physician well being and his studies in this area have been cited by CNN, USA Today, and The New York Times.
We hope you enjoy this episode where we talk about his book, why wellness initiatives often fall flat, and how we can build a positive work environment.
Welcome to leading the rounds
Questions we asked:

  • How has the pandemic changed the ideas you wrote into “Mayo Clinic Strategies to Reduce Burnout”?
  • What systemic issues in healthcare wellbeing has the pandemic shined a light on?
  • What were some of the processes that your team at Stanford implemented to fight the pandemic?
  • Are financial constraints a valid argument for not prioritizing healthcare wellness?
  • What makes a good wellness initiative?
  • What would you say to a medical leader who is making excuses for not prioritizing physician wellness?

Quotes:

  • ”The culture of our organizations is the foundation of wellbeing and professional fulfillment.”
  • "It’s about organizational change, systems change, and culture change, not tips and tricks for personal resilience.”
  • ”Our goal is to fix a broken work environment, not teach and train physicians to tolerate a broken work environment.”
  • Ask your team, ”What do you need from your leaders that you’re not currently getting? What have your leaders done that has been effective?”
  • ”Probably the most important thing we can do [is] listening.”
  • ”When organizational wellness efforts are either lip service, or manifest as yoga and granola and learn how to practice mindfulness… they will fall flat.”
  • ”Physicians have higher resilience than the general population.”
  • ”Even physicians with the highest scores on resiliency… have high levels of burnout.”
  • ”Our efforts are focused on improving the work environment.”
  • ”The purpose of the leader is to accomplish the mission and attend to the welfare of the soldiers.”

Book suggestions:

  • Humble Inquiry: The Gentle Art of Asking Instead of Telling by Edgar Schein
  • Good to Great by Jim Collins
  • Tribal Leadership by Dave Logan
  continue reading

60 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 320202008 series 3315507
Content provided by Caleb Sokolowski & Peter Dimitrion, Caleb Sokolowski, and Peter Dimitrion. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Caleb Sokolowski & Peter Dimitrion, Caleb Sokolowski, and Peter Dimitrion or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode we interview Dr. Tait Shanafelt. Dr. Shanafelt is a Jeanie and Stewart Ritchie Professor of Medicine, Chief Wellness Officer, and associate dean at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is the co-author, with one of our former guests Steven Swenson, of “Mayo Clinic Strategies to Reduce Burnout”. He is credited for bringing physician-burnout to the forefront of healthcare discussion. He is a leader in the field of physician wellness and healthcare team efficiency. He has published numerous works in the field of physician well being and his studies in this area have been cited by CNN, USA Today, and The New York Times.
We hope you enjoy this episode where we talk about his book, why wellness initiatives often fall flat, and how we can build a positive work environment.
Welcome to leading the rounds
Questions we asked:

  • How has the pandemic changed the ideas you wrote into “Mayo Clinic Strategies to Reduce Burnout”?
  • What systemic issues in healthcare wellbeing has the pandemic shined a light on?
  • What were some of the processes that your team at Stanford implemented to fight the pandemic?
  • Are financial constraints a valid argument for not prioritizing healthcare wellness?
  • What makes a good wellness initiative?
  • What would you say to a medical leader who is making excuses for not prioritizing physician wellness?

Quotes:

  • ”The culture of our organizations is the foundation of wellbeing and professional fulfillment.”
  • "It’s about organizational change, systems change, and culture change, not tips and tricks for personal resilience.”
  • ”Our goal is to fix a broken work environment, not teach and train physicians to tolerate a broken work environment.”
  • Ask your team, ”What do you need from your leaders that you’re not currently getting? What have your leaders done that has been effective?”
  • ”Probably the most important thing we can do [is] listening.”
  • ”When organizational wellness efforts are either lip service, or manifest as yoga and granola and learn how to practice mindfulness… they will fall flat.”
  • ”Physicians have higher resilience than the general population.”
  • ”Even physicians with the highest scores on resiliency… have high levels of burnout.”
  • ”Our efforts are focused on improving the work environment.”
  • ”The purpose of the leader is to accomplish the mission and attend to the welfare of the soldiers.”

Book suggestions:

  • Humble Inquiry: The Gentle Art of Asking Instead of Telling by Edgar Schein
  • Good to Great by Jim Collins
  • Tribal Leadership by Dave Logan
  continue reading

60 episodes

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