%0 Journal Article %T Qualitative Analysis of Well-being Preparedness at an Emergency Medicine Residency Program %A David Diller %A Jessica Osterman %A Ramin Tabatabai %J Archive of "Western Journal of Emergency Medicine". %D 2019 %R 10.5811/westjem.2018.10.39764 %X There is significant variability in the preparedness of incoming interns at the start of residency training with regard to medical knowledge, procedural skills, and attitudes. Specialty-specific preparatory courses aimed at improving clinical skills exist; however, no preparatory courses targeting wellness promotion or burnout prevention have previously been described. Resident well-being has gained increasing attention from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, and numerous studies have demonstrated high levels of burnout among resident physicians. The American Medical Association (AMA) divides resident well-being into the following six categories: nutrition, fitness, emotional health, financial health, preventative care, and mindset and behavioral adaptability. Using the AMA¡¯s conceptual framework for well-being in residency, we performed a targeted needs assessment to support the development of a ¡°pre-residency¡± well-being curriculum. Our aim was to discover what current residents and faculty felt were the perceived areas of under-preparedness, in relation to resident well-being, for incoming interns at the start of their residency training %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6324710/