November/December 2021 Common Sense

Page 26

WELLNESS COMMITTEE

From dglaucomflecken on twitter:

From Hero to Zero: Naiken, COVID-19, and Ways to Develop Empathy Despite Patients’ Challenging Life Choices Andrew Grock, MD*, Al’ai Alvarez, MD FAAEM†, and Ilene Claudius, MD FAAEM‡

2020

MD 1: Hey, do you know everyone is cheering for us out there? MD 2: Yeah, they are thanking us for working so hard to save people’s lives during the pandemic.

W

orking in the ED has always been difficult. We do the best we can, the fastest we can, in order to help the most people that we can, regardless of their ability to pay, the severity of their illness, often while ignoring our own physical and emotional needs. On top of this stressful environment, we often bear the brunt of our patients’ anger and frustration at illness, at waits, or at stressors unrelated to our care.1 Hence, much has been written on the limits and importance of physician empathy. Then the COVID-19 pandemic happened, placing us in the center of a passionate and often political debate. Heated conversations over vaccines and masking interrupt our provision of care, and we subject ourselves to the potential of direct harm from getting infected to care for patients who deny the very existence of the disease for which we treat them.2 While caring for patients who make self-destructive decisions is not new to emergency medicine, the pandemic is different. The impact of COVID-19 on our daily lives has been overwhelming to many. Staff, families, and other patients are at risk of exposure. Patients coming in for other illnesses can wait longer for both emergency and definitive care because of COVID-19 overcrowding. There are conversations with patients demanding unproven therapeutics or those for which they don’t qualify. Worse, protesters are vilifying instead of appreciating the efforts of the medical community

26

COMMON SENSE NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2021

to prevent and treat Covid. In short, we’re exhausted, depleted, worse, feeling betrayed. Now, more than ever, we face an enormous gap in the amount of empathy we want to give and what little we have left. While we can work to remedy this problem (strengthening our public health sector, educating our population, promoting societal leaders who defer to experts and promote truth over political capital, and crafting limitations that spread harmful misinformation on social media), we must also address our own struggles with burnout and decline in empathy. Several techniques have been described across a range of populations. This article will focus on one such technique known as Naiken. Naikan is a Japanese introspection practice, which literally means “inner-looking” or “introspection.” It involves an examination of past deeds from both their own perspective and from the perspective of others. It consists of asking oneself the following three questions: • What did I receive from this person? • What did I return to this person? • What troubles, worries, unhappiness did I cause this person?3 More traditional Naikan practice consists of 15 hours of contemplation, divided into two-hourly periods. The participant engages in personal reflection on the three pre-set questions then

reports thoughts back to a “guide” who listens and allows the participant to contemplate. While this time commitment may be unrealistic for many physicians and trainees, the essence of Naikan can be incorporated into meditation, debriefing, or wellness sessions. The Naikan-based compassion training program emphasizes our interdependency with others and appreciating the kindness of others. Gratitude toward patients and sympathy for the pain that our long wait times, bad news, and other inconveniences we have caused them enable us to develop endearment and compassion for them. Improvements in interdependency and gratitude develop quickly and have been demonstrated in a short period of only one week of Naikan practice. >>

2021

MD 1: Hey, why are all those people booing and yelling at us out there? MD 2: Yeah, they are protesting us for trying to save people’s lives during the pandemic.

WHILE WE CANNOT SIMPLY “COMPASSION” OUR WAY INTO ALL THE CHALLENGES  WE ENCOUNTER IN HEALTHCARE…THE NAIKAN PHILOSOPHY OFFERS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR US TO REMAIN OPEN AND COMMITTED DESPITE MANY CHALLENGES. CHOOSING COMPASSION IS WITHIN OUR CONTROL.”


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Articles inside

Not Burnout: Moral Injury in the ED

5min
pages 42-43

Job Bank

7min
pages 53-56

Board of Directors Meeting Summary: November

2min
page 52

Critical Care Medicine Section: Bougie Conundrum: Airway Adjunct or Secret to 1st Pass Success? Should We Incorporate into Routine Practice and How?

7min
pages 49-51

AAEM/RSA President’s Message: Physician Suicide Awareness

2min
page 46

Gallbladder Wall Thickening: Not Always Acute Chotecystitis

4min
page 47

Young Physicians Section: Understanding the Transition from Resident to Attending Practice

4min
pages 44-45

Pre-hospital Shortness of Breath

5min
page 48

Emergency Ultrasound Section: Give Me a Break: Ultrasound Guided Serratus Anterior Plane Block

5min
pages 38-41

Women in Emergency Medicine: Infertility: Using Knowledge to Advocate for Change

4min
page 35

Emergency Ultrasound Section: EUS-AAEM 2020-2021 Round Up

3min
pages 36-37

Operations Management Committee: Geriatric Patient Experience in the Emergency Department

6min
pages 33-34

Emergency Medicine Workforce Committee: ‘Tis the Season

2min
page 32

AAEM Financial Update: Investing Your Money in You

3min
page 30

Advocacy: AAEM’s New Action Center: Grassroots Advocacy Made Simple

2min
page 31

Wellness Committee: Perfectionism: Our Dangerous Frenemy

5min
pages 28-29

Wellness Committee: From Hero to Zero: Naiken, COVID-19, and Ways to Develop Empathy Despite Patients’ Challenging Life Choices

5min
pages 26-27

President’s Message: The Principle of Moral Proximity

8min
pages 3-5

Medication Prescribing in Time of COVID, Unproven Remedies, Overstepped Autonomy, Known Harms: A Toxicologic Argument Against Ivermectin for COVID-19

9min
pages 21-23

Legislators in the News: An Interview with Congresswoman Dr. Kim Schrier

9min
pages 9-10

Opinion: An Ethical Mandate for Federal Law: Vaccination Against COVID-19

6min
pages 24-25

Academic Affairs Committee: Resilience Lesson: Giving Negative Feedback

5min
pages 18-20

New Column: Heart of a Doctor

12min
pages 11-13

From the Editor’s Desk: We Need to Take Care of Our Children

9min
pages 6-8
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