Background: Mentorship is the foundation for training and career development. However, only about half of interventional radiology (IR) residency programs in the United States have a formal mentorship program at their institution. A new tiered mentorship program was introduced at our institution.
Methods: A structured mentorship program was created at our institution in 2020 for IR residents to pair 1-2 faculty advisors with a group of residents, one from each PGY class, based on personal interests and career paths. A quality improvement survey with Likert scale format (1-5) was sent to IR residents and faculty members.
Results: Responses were recorded from 11 IR residents in addition to all 6 IR faculty mentors. IR respondents reported satisfaction with feeling more assimilated in the department and all would recommend the current mentorship model to other institutions. Most respondents agreed the program made them comfortable conducting effective mentorship relationships as an attending and that the tiered structured of being mentee and mentor simultaneously was beneficial. Both IR residents and faculty agreed that the program helped prevent burnout.
Conclusions: The tiered mentorship model has had a positive impact on the IR program by providing structured mentoring and longitudinal relationships. The most notable benefits for IR residents is the early integration into the program, sustained mentorships relationships, and the prevention of burnout. Similar models can help other programs establish structured faculty and peer mentorship for residents early in training.
Keywords: Interventional radiology; Mentorship; Residency.
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