• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
The Association for Surgical Education

The Association for Surgical Education

Impacting Surgical Education Globally

  • About
    • By-Laws
    • Contact the ASE
    • Leadership
    • Past Presidents
    • Standing Committees
    • Global Surgical Education-Journal of the ASE
    • ASE Strategic Plan 2023-2026
  • Join!
  • Meeting
    • Annual Meeting Information
    • ASE Fall Meeting & Courses
    • Call For Abstracts
      • Scientific Sessions
      • Candlelight Session
      • Multi-Institutional Research Submissions
      • Thinking Out of the Box
      • Workshop and Panel Submissions
    • Institutional Members & Sponsors
      • 2024 ASE Institutional Members and Sponsors
    • Exhibits and Commercial Promotion Opportunities
      • 2024 ASE Industry, Foundation and Society Sponsors
      • 2024 Surgical Education Week Exhibitors
    • Meetings Archives
    • Media Gallery
  • Awards & Programs
    • Academy of Clerkship Directors
    • Academic Program Administrator Certification in Surgery
    • 2023-2024 Association for Surgical Education Curriculum in Education Innovation and Teaching (ASCENT)
    • ASE/APDS: Collaborative Grant Initiative
    • Education Awards
    • Multi-Institutional Research Grant
    • ASE DEI Underrepresented in Medicine (URiM) Scholarship Application
    • Surgical Education and Leadership Fellowship (SELF)
    • Surgical Education Research Fellowship (SERF)
      • Surgical Education Research Fellowship Graduates
    • Visiting Scholar Fellowship
    • Ethics of Surgery Fellowship (EthoS)
  • Foundation
    • Donate Now!
    • Foundation Board
    • Honoring Our Surgical Education Mentors and Educators
    • The ASE Foundation: Building for the Future – Donors
    • Deb DaRosa Scholarship Application
    • Dr. Debra DaRosa Career Development Scholarship – Donors
    • CESERT Pyramid Grant Application
    • Spotlight on CESERT Pyramid Grant Awardees!
    • Newsletter
    • Annual Report
    • Review Committee
    • Grants Awarded
    • Corporate Partners
  • Resources
    • Policy for Conducting Survey Research of ASE Members
    • Nonphysician Professional Educator
    • Educational Materials
    • Collaborative Curricula
    • Getting Started in Surgical Education Research
    • Surgical Education Research Modules
    • Surgical Education Research Webinar Series
    • Podcasts
    • Teaching Modules
    • ASE CoSEF Peer Engagement for Education Research Success Webinar Series
  • ATLAS
  • Donate
  • Login

Annual Meeting 2018 Presentations

Poster4 - 05: THE MENTOR MATCH: A NEW APPROACH TO IMPLEMENTING FORMAL MENTORSHIP IN GENERAL SURGERY RESIDENCY
Rebecca M Jordan, DO1, Lauryn Ullrich, DO1, Jacqueline Oxenberg, DO1, Joseph Stella, DO1, Joseph Bannon, MD2; 1Geisinger Wyoming Valley, 2Geisinger Community Medical Center

 

Introduction: Mentorship has multiple benefits in surgical training including improved career satisfaction, academic success, networking, and better work-family balance.  While it is recommended that surgical residencies have an established mentorship program (MP), only 50% of programs within surgery departments in the United States are well established, most being informal and unstructured. Realizing that our institution’s mentorship program was similarly unstructured, the decision was made to develop a formal MP. To successfully pair mentors and mentees based on their strengths and interests, a match process was designed based on the ACGME core competencies.

Methods: Surveys were administered to residents PGY1-4 and faculty in December of 2016. Both groups were asked to rank six areas in ascending order of need for improvement. These areas, based on the ACGME core competencies, included: operative skills (patient care), ABSITE preparation (medical knowledge), leadership (communication skills), research (practice based learning), career guidance (system based practice), and interpersonal relationships (professionalism). Field of interest, established mentor relationships, desired frequency of meetings, and mentor preferences were collected as well. The program director and associate program director assigned mentors based on best match results. Residents and mentors met formally each quarter (every 3 months) during which Medhub evaluations were to be completed by mentors. After one year, residents were surveyed anonymously to evaluate the program.

Results: Resident participation in the program was 100% while survey response was 83%. Ninety-two percent of residents surveyed were satisfied with the mentorship program overall and 83% saw improvement in the areas they ranked as highest need on the initial survey. Seventy-five percent felt that the match process was an effective method for matching mentors and mentees.  While all residents met formally with their mentor each quarter, many also reported frequent informal meetings. Fifty percent of residents discussed the core competencies, among other topics, at each meeting.

Conclusion: The matching process for a formal mentorship program was found to be effective, with positive subjective results after the initial year of implementation. Future analyses will be conducted evaluating individual improvement in the six ACGME core competencies for each resident.

Footer

Contact the ASE

11300 W. Olympic Blvd
Suite 600
Los Angeles, CA 90064 USA
(310) 215-1226
[email protected]

Follow ASE

  • LinkedIn
  • X

Advanced Training in Laparoscopic Suturing

The Official Journal of the Association for Surgical Education

Follow GSE on X

  • X