BRiC Study - Burnout and Resilience in Organ Donation CoordinatorsJanuary 2021 - Update No. 3 |
In the national Burnout and Resilience in Organ Donation Coordinators (BRiC) study, we are implementing an innovative way to address burnout and enhance resilience among Canadian organ and tissue donation coordinators (OTDCs) through early identification and intervention of stress, burnout, and compassion fatigue to support the well-being of OTDCs and the retention of skilled, trained OTDCs, in order to optimize organ donation among organ donation organizations (ODOs).
Learn more about this project here.
BRiC was initially planned as a three-phase study focused on systematically investigating ways to minimize the impacts of compassion fatigue, burnout, and moral distress, and to identify ways to increase resilience. BRiC is the core project, with additional projects developed as the need for further exploration of particular aspects of the work-related issues were identified.
Burnout and compassion fatigue among organ and tissue donation coordinators: a scoping review. Silva E Silva V, Hornby L, Almost J, Lotherington K, Appleby A, Silva AR, Rochon A, Dhanani S.BMJ Open. 2020 Dec 15;10(12):e040783. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040783.PMID: 33323439
Burnout and compassion fatigue among organ donation coordinators: a scoping review protocol. Silva E Silva V, Hornby L, Almost J, Lotherington K, Appleby A, Dhanani S.JBI Evid Synth. 2020 Nov;18(11):2435-2442. doi: 10.11124/JBISRIR-D-19-00256.PMID: 32813418
We are developing a mixed-method study (online quantitative survey followed by qualitative interviews) to explore burnout and compassion fatigue among OTDCs and further understand their perceptions about these work-related issues. Due to the current pandemic, organ donation services were affected and many OTDCs were deployed to work in other clinical areas, including ICUs caring for patients diagnosed with COVID-19. The results from this study will inform the development of phase III of the BRiC study, an intervention to address the key issues and concerns identified in this population. Therefore, we believe it will be important to explore the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on their work and stressors.
Overview: A qualitative study to evaluate a workshop conducted in a western Canadian province in spring 2019 that focused on team cohesion and communication among OTDCs. Semi-structured interviews were conducted through Zoom in March 2020 to explore the role of the OTDC, the OTDC experience of participating in the workshop, and the impact on team dynamics and cohesion.
Status: This study generated data for two manuscripts, one focused on the OTDCs perception of burnout and compassion fatigue (ready for submission), and a second manuscript focused on the OTDCs perception of a workshop about team cohesion and communication (being finalized for publication at the Intensive and Critical Care Nursing Journal).
Overview: During the working meeting held in Ottawa, Ontario in February 2020, we had the pleasure of hosting a day of deep and meaningful discussions about the topics of burnout and compassion fatigue among OTDCs and the BRiC study. OTDCs and administrators from five Canadian ODOs attended the meeting. Two focus group sessions were held during the working meeting to (1) discuss the relevance of the topics for ODOs/OTDCS and common challenges faced by OTDCs; and (2) discuss and identify the best approaches for BRiC phases 2 (data collection) and 3 (intervention).
Status:
Overview: An opinion paper was written in collaboration with OTDCs from 5 Canadian provinces and international subject matter experts. Canadian OTDCs voiced their concerns and experiences about work-related issues such as burnout. After receiving feedback about the format of the paper, it was re-shaped and refined into a reflective narrative.
Status: The paper is ready for submission and we are finalizing details to submit to the Canadian Journal of Critical Care Nursing.
Overview: As a research group, one of our core principles is to share our findings to provide evidence to support advancements in the organ donation and transplantation community and knowledge users. This year, we had the opportunity and pleasure to present the work of the BRiC study at various conferences, as well as to ODOs and OTDCs.
Presentations:
To learn more about the project and the project team and visit profedu.blood.ca/BRIC
If you would like to know more and potentially collaborate with this study, please contact our research team at vsilvaesilva@cheo.on.ca or ken.lotherington@blood.ca.