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Author Notes:

Corresponding author: maya.iyer@nationwidechildrens.org

Acknowledgments We thank the alumnae of the Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine program for providing examples of their lived experiences.

Disclosures None to report.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

Dr. Maya S. Iyer received funding from the Physicians Foundation (grant 5649618).

Keywords:

  • Bullying
  • Antibullying Policies
  • Mitigation
  • Mistreatment
  • Medical Education
  • Academic Medicine

Disrupting Faculty-on-Faculty Bullying in Academic Medicine: An Innovative Workshop

Tools:

Journal Title:

MedEd PORTAL

Volume:

Volume 19

Publisher:

, Pages 11352-None

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Introduction Bullying, a severe form of mistreatment, occurs when an individual in an authority position intentionally imposes negative persistent behaviors on a target. In academic medicine, bullying is used to impede the target's professional growth. While there is abundant literature on how to disrupt other forms of mistreatment, the literature related to bullying among academic medical faculty members is scarce. Methods We developed an interactive workshop on disrupting faculty-on-faculty bullying in academic medicine, with a focus on gender-based bullying, following Kern's model of curriculum development. The workshop consisted of three didactics on the scope of bullying in academic medicine: identifying bullying behaviors, learning strategies to mitigate bullying, and understanding what constitutes comprehensive antibullying policies. The workshop also included three small-group activities to reinforce learned concepts. Results Eighty-seven faculty attended one of three workshops held over a 6-month period. We received 24 completed evaluations for a 28% rate of return. Most participants rated workshop activities as being well taught and of great value. Many respondents commented that after participating in the workshop, they realized they had likely experienced or witnessed bullying in their careers and that mitigating bullying required effort at multiple levels (individual, institutional, national). Discussion This workshop fills a need in academic medicine through addressing how faculty members and institutions can help themselves and others to disrupt bullying. We will continue to disseminate this workshop at national conferences and at individual institutions. This resource will allow other educators to offer the workshop at their home institutions.

Copyright information:

© 2023 Iyer et al.

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
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