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Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Personal Finances Preparing for Grad School/Residency Wellness

#78 – Thrive in Training: how to transition to practice

This episode covers advice for the last six months of anesthesia training, transitioning out of training and into the first six months of your anesthesia practice.

The year encompassing your last six months of training through boards and your first six months of practice is epic!  

There’s a huge learning curve you encounter during your first six months of anesthesia practice following the “completion of training.” Finishing training is a bit of a misnomer given that the best providers keep training… keep practicing and developing towards true expertise and mastering their craft.

This was the first solo episode I produced on From the Head of the Bed, meaning just me and the mic. I originally published this on February 1, 2016, about 8 months after I completed anesthesia training and passed boards. At the time, I wanted to do a show on transitioning to practice before the lessons of that time faded from my immediate memory.

I think there’s three big aspects of the last six months of anesthesia training: completing your research/thesis/DNP or residency project, securing a job and passing boards. For CRNAs, we must pass boards before we begin work. For physician residents, you may start working as a board-eligible physician anesthesiologist and work towards completing boards after you make that transition to practice.

I speak a bit about wrapping up training in this episode from the experience side of things… your co-residents will likely scatter to take jobs all across the nation after training. Try to connect with them in the final months and thank your program faculty. They pour a ton of effort into developing you as a provider and launching you into the world. A little gratitude goes a long way towards helping them know their work is appreciated.

The first six months of your practice brings a massive learning curve as you’re finally charged with putting all of the pieces together on your own. This is an important time where you must answer the following questions concerning your actual practice:

  1. Why do I do what I do?
  2. Why do I not do what I don’t do?

Sounds simple enough, but you must clarify your decision making around clinical judgments and interventions finally for yourself and not because your program faculty or preceptors prefer you to do or not do something. My encouragement is that you frame your decision making on the latest evidence for best practices and not simply because you taught one way to do things. You must continue to evolve your practice after graduation.

I hope you enjoy this show. As always, drop your comments or questions on the website, social media or in an email to me. If you haven’t already, please take 3-5 minutes and drop a review on Apple podcasts. You rating, but especially your written review, helps push the podcast out to more people and helps those individuals trust the show.

I mentioned this article in the podcast:

Assante, J., Collins, S., & Hewer, I. (2015). Infection Associated With Single-Dose Dexamethasone for Prevention of Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting: A Literature Review. AANA Journal83(4), 281-288.

Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Leadership in Emergencies Preparing for Grad School/Residency Wellness

#32 – Harnessing the power of deliberate practice

This podcast discusses deliberate practice, a concept developed by renowned cognitive psychologist Anders Ericsson, PhD. Deliberate practice is the kind of practice that top performers employ in order to reach the very highest levels of excellence across domains. Ericsson studied countless musicians, athletes, dancers, chess players, medical professionals and others to uncover the secrets and power of deliberate practice.

Malcolm Gladwell popularized some of Ericsson’s work in his 2008 book, Outliers, as the 10,000-hour rule to expertise, stating that on average, it takes about 10,000 hours to develop as an expert. But it’s not as easy as that. It’s not that simple. It’s not just about being on the job for 10,000 hours. And you know what I’m talking about. You’ve worked with people who are very experienced yet not the best – not even great – perhaps even mediocre, at their jobs. What Ericsson saw is that it takes top performers around 10,000 hours of deliberate practice – a concentrated, effortful, focused kind of practice, with feedback from a coach, to achieve the top level in any field.

Check out the podcast and links in the show notes for a quick break down and some examples of how to harness deliberate practice to improve your anesthesia career.

Resources:

Ericsson, K. A. (2008). Deliberate practice and acquisition of expert performance: a general overview. Academic emergency medicine, 15(11), 988-994.

Ericsson, K. A. (2004). Deliberate practice and the acquisition and maintenance of expert performance in medicine and related domains. Academic medicine, 79(10), S70-S81.

Ericsson, K. A. (2015). Acquisition and Maintenance of Medical Expertise: A Perspective From the Expert – Performance Approach With Deliberate Practice. Academic Medicine, 90(11), 1471. doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000000939

Ericsson, A., & Pool, R. (2016). Peak: Secrets from the new science of expertise. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Weinger, M. B., Banerjee, A., Burden, A. R., McIvor, W. R., Boulet, J., Cooper, J. B., … & Torsher, L. (2017). Simulation-based assessment of the management of critical events by board-certified anesthesiologists. Anesthesiology: The Journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, 127(3), 475-489.  

Young, J. 5 May 2020. Researcher Behind ‘10,000-Hour Rule’ Says Good Teaching Matters, Not Just Practice. (podcast). EdSurg Podcast.  Retrieved from https://www.edsurge.com/news/2020-05-05-researcher-behind-10-000-hour-rule-says-good-teaching-matters-not-just-practice.