SGEM#289: I Want a Dog to Relieve My Stress in the Emergency Department

The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine - Un podcast de Dr. Ken Milne

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Date: April 9th, 2020 Reference: Kline et al. Randomized trial of therapy dogs versus deliberative coloring (art therapy) to reduce stress in emergency medicine providers. AEM April 2020 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Justin Morgenstern is an emergency physician and the creator of the excellent #FOAMed project called First10EM.com Case: It has been a hard shift. You wish you could say “uncharacteristically”, but recently all your shifts in the emergency department have felt a little hard. The increased workload due to COVID-19 hasn’t been helping. You sit down to chart after a difficult resuscitation, and the charge nurse, seeing that you look a little stressed, asks if you would like to take a break to play with a dog. Background: Medicine is an incredibly rewarding profession. However, it is undeniably marked by significant levels of stress. Reports of burnout are high across medicine, and even higher in emergency medicine (1,2). A study of USA physicians showed that they had more than  50% with at least one symptom of burnout. Emergency physicians reported the highest prevalence of burnout at around 70% (3). Burnout is associated with a loss of empathy and compassion towards patients, decreased job satisfaction, and shorter careers in medicine (4,5). It has also been associated with negative impacts on patient care including self-perceived medical error (6), risk of medical errors (7), and quality of care (8,9). We have covered burnout a few times on the SGEM including my own personal experience of being on the edge of burnout: * Five Tips: To Avoid Emergency Medicine Burnout * SGEM#178:Mindfulness – It’s not Better to Burnout than it is to Rust * SGEM Xtra: On the Edge of Burnout ACEM18 * SGEM Xtra: CAEP Wellness Week 2019 * YouTube: Being on the Edge of Burnout One Year Later There is some prior literature that exposure to animals decreases stress (10,11). Theoretically, time spent deliberately coloring as a mindfulness practice could also decrease stress (12). Therefore, these authors designed a prospective, randomized trial comparing the effects of dog therapy, deliberate coloring, and control on stress levels for emergency department providers (13). Clinical Question: Does dog therapy result in lower perceived stress than deliberate coloring or control when applied as a break during an emergency medicine shift? Reference: Kline et al. Randomized trial of therapy dogs versus deliberative coloring (art therapy) to reduce stress in emergency medicine providers. AEM April 2020 * Population: Emergency care providers, including nurses, residents, and physicians, from a single center emergency department. * Exclusions: Dislike, allergy, fear, or other reason not to interact with a therapy dog. * Intervention: There were two interventions, which occurred approximately midway through the provider’s shift. Dog therapy consisted of an interaction with a therapy dog, which providers could pet or touch if they wished. The coloring group was provided with three mandalas to choose to color and a complete set of coloring pencils. Both of these activities occurred in a quiet room, physically separated from the clinical care area, with no electronic devices, telephone, window, or overhead speaker.

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