An evaluation of the West of Scotland in-programme Chief Resident role

Postgraduate leadership education is an evolving field. Locally we have an established ‘Chief Residency’ programme where centres have two to four senior trainees completing leadership duties alongside clinical workload, supported by local directors of medical education. This is twinned with a 4-day...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFuture healthcare journal Vol. 11; no. 2; p. 100131
Main Authors Robertson, Callum, Manners, Rachel, Bingham, Katharine, French, Helen, Porteous, Kelly Yvonne, Oliver, Scott
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2024
Royal College of Physicians
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Summary:Postgraduate leadership education is an evolving field. Locally we have an established ‘Chief Residency’ programme where centres have two to four senior trainees completing leadership duties alongside clinical workload, supported by local directors of medical education. This is twinned with a 4-day central training programme and peer-support network. To assess perspectives of the CR role, we adopted a qualitative case-study design using an electronic questionnaire delivered to previous chief residents between 2020 and 2023. Results were analysed using thematic analysis. Trainees valued involvement within quality improvement and trainee support, demonstrating successful multi-departmental projects. Leadership education was viewed ubiquitously positively but participants felt further work is needed to address role legitimacy locally. A proposed solution was junior doctor leadership teams to address workload and emotional challenges. This model provides further evidence of the value in investing in trainee leadership positions, demonstrating organisational impact. Future work will research hospital peer leadership teams.
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ISSN:2514-6645
2514-6653
DOI:10.1016/j.fhj.2024.100131