Development and Pilot Implementation of the Buddy Scheme for New Psychiatry Trainees
Naile Aybike Sahin, Elizabeth Keeper

TL;DR
The Buddy Scheme was developed to help new psychiatry trainees adapt to their training through peer support and structured resources.
Contribution
A novel mentorship program combining peer support and tailored resources for new psychiatry trainees.
Findings
Trainees identified the need for structured guidance and peer/mentor support during their transition.
A guidebook and checklist were created based on trainee feedback to improve training experience.
Initial enthusiasm for the mentorship program suggests potential benefits for trainee confidence and wellbeing.
Abstract
Aims: New psychiatry trainees face several challenges during their initiation to training including adaptation to a new trust, familiarising organisation-specific systems, and understanding training requirements. These challenges affect trainee’s overall confidence and wellbeing. The Buddy Scheme was intended to tackle these by creating a “psychiatry family” for the new trainees. “Psychiatry Family” includes a core trainee and a higher trainee, aiming to foster peer support and mentorship. The goal was to improve new trainee experience, build confidence, and enhance training experience. Methods: In order to identify the need for the Buddy Scheme and determine common challenges faced in the beginning of the training we conducted a semi-structured focus group including 6 trainees from the previous cohort. The discussion was focused on personal experiences, challenges, perspectives and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Health · Health and Medical Research Impacts · Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
