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An Assessment of Emotional Intelligence in Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians Dimitrios Papanagnou, MD, MPH, EdD Candidate; Kathryn M. Linder, ScB;

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Presentation on theme: "An Assessment of Emotional Intelligence in Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians Dimitrios Papanagnou, MD, MPH, EdD Candidate; Kathryn M. Linder, ScB;"— Presentation transcript:

1 An Assessment of Emotional Intelligence in Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians Dimitrios Papanagnou, MD, MPH, EdD Candidate; Kathryn M. Linder, ScB; Konstantina Papathomas, MD Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA BACKGROUNDThe EQ-I 2.0 METHODS Current post-graduate residents (PGY-1s, -2s, and -3s) of Thomas Jefferson University Hospital’s Emergency Medicine Resident Program completed the Emotional Quotient Inventory (EQ-I 2.0, Multi-Health Systems, MHS). A weblink was emailed to residents: anonymous 133-item questionnaire. Residents were given 2 weeks to complete the inventory. Upon completion, EI scores were calculated electronically by MHS. Scores included 5 composite scores: 1) self-perception; 2) self-expression; 3) interpersonal; 4) decision making; and 5) stress management. Scores also included 15 sub-category scores on EI competencies. Differences in EI scores were examined across gender, age, and year of training. Scores are reported as means with 95% confidence intervals (CI). The organizational psychology literature is replete with studies that highlight the role emotional intelligence (EI) plays: academic and professional leadership; job performance; stress management; and protection against burnout. To date, no prior studies address EI in emergency medicine (EM) residency training. The authors sought to: 1) define the EI profile for EM residents; and 2) identify strengths and weaknesses in core EI competencies to better inform curricular interventions and wellness during residency training.

2 RESULTS REFERENCESCONCLUSION An Assessment of Emotional Intelligence in Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians Dimitrios Papanagnou, MD, MPH, EdD Candidate; Kathryn M. Linder, ScB; Konstantina Papathomas, MD Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 36 residents completed the EQ-I 2.0 (100% response rate). Results were normed to the US general population (mean 100, SD 15). Total mean EI for the residency: 104 (95% CI, 100-108). Total mean EI: Females (107) > Males (101). No differences noted across age. Highest composite scores: 1) interpersonal skills (107); 2) stress management (105). Cohort strengths: self-actualization (107), empathy (107), interpersonal relationships (106), impulse control (106), and stress tolerance (106). Cohort weaknesses: assertiveness (98). PGY-2 scores lowest (95) vs. PGY-1 (104) and PGY-3 (110) scores. Lowest PGY-2 scores: self-regard (89), assertiveness (88), independence (90), problem solving (94), flexibility (97), and optimism (96). PGY-1 strengths: empathy (101), self-actualization (110), social responsibility (107), optimism (106), interpersonal relationships (105), impulse control (104). Lowest PGY-1 scores : assertiveness (99). PGY-3 scores highest nearly in all sub-categories, with highest scores in stress tolerance (113), self-actualization (111), and empathy (109). Results highlight EI domains representing residents’ strengths and domains that may benefit from educational, training, and wellness interventions during post-graduate training. Johnson JM, Stern TA: Teaching residents about emotional intelligence and its impact on leadership. Academic psychiatry : the journal of the American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training and the Association for Academic Psychiatry 2014, 38(4):510-513. McKinley SK, Petrusa ER, Fiedeldey-Van Dijk C, Mullen JT, Smink DS, Scott-Vernaglia SE, Kent TS, Black-Schaffer WS, Phitayakorn R: A multi-institutional study of the emotional intelligence of resident physicians. American journal of surgery 2015, 209(1):26-33. The Science Behind EQ-i 2.0 [https://tap.mhs.com/EQi20TheScience.aspx]https://tap.mhs.com/EQi20TheScience.aspx Bar-On R: The Bar-On model of emotional-social intelligence (ESI). Psicothema 2006, 18 Suppl:13-25.


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