# Implementing a Novel Resident-Led Peer Support Program for Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians

**Authors:** Kyra D. Reed, Alexandra E. Serpe, Alexandria P. Weston, Destiny D. Folk, Heather P. Kelker, Aloysius J. Humbert, Katie E. Pettit, Julie L. Welch

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15070943 · 2025-07-12

## TL;DR

This study shows that a resident-led peer support program in emergency medicine helps participants feel better immediately after sessions, even if overall burnout rates remain unchanged.

## Contribution

A novel resident-led peer support program was implemented and evaluated for emergency medicine residents.

## Key findings

- Residents attended peer support sessions, with 50% of residents participating at least once.
- 94% of participants felt immediately better after sessions, despite no significant change in overall burnout rates.
- Female residents had higher burnout rates at baseline and during recurrent sessions.

## Abstract

Background: Residency training is a formative and rigorous experience, with burnout rates reported at 76%. Formal peer support groups have shown improvement in burnout among healthcare workers with anxiety and depression. Objective: Implement a peer support program for emergency medicine (EM) residents and characterize utilization of metrics by demographics, burnout rates of participants, and overall session impact. Methods: An IRB-approved, longitudinal, prospective cohort study of 73 EM and EM/Pediatrics residents post-graduate year (PGY) 1–5 from July 2021–June 2022 was performed. Resident peer leaders were trained using a novel curriculum to lead peer support groups. Residents were invited to participate in biweekly sessions, with optional pre- and post-session surveys measuring demographics, burnout, themes discussed, and how they felt after sessions (Patients’ Global Impression of Change scale). Results: There were 134 attendances over 20 sessions, averaging 6 residents per session. Of 73 total residents, 37 (50%) participated at least once. All levels of training were represented, with half being female, 20% underrepresented in medicine, and 14% LGBTQ+. Overall burnout rates were unchanged for first-time attendances (49%, n = 18) vs. recurrent (50%, n = 11). Females had higher burnout at both baseline (60%, n = 15) and recurrent sessions (69%, n = 13). Following sessions, 94% of participants reported feeling immediately better and 100% of leaders felt prepared leading peer support sessions. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that residents utilize peer support, with many returning more than once. Despite stable burnout rates, 94% of participants felt immediately better after the session, suggesting that peer support is a valuable resource for residents actively experiencing burnout.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), burnout (MESH:D002055), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292695/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292695