• The Stress Resistant Leader with Dr. Daniel Dworkis

  • 2022/08/22
  • 再生時間: 42 分
  • ポッドキャスト

The Stress Resistant Leader with Dr. Daniel Dworkis

  • サマリー

  • Dan Dworkis, MD PhD FACEP is the Chief Medical Officer at the Mission Critical Team Institute, a board-certified emergency physician, and an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC where he works at LAC+USC. He performed his emergency medicine residency with Harvard Medical School at the Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency at Massachusetts General Hospital / Brigham Health, and holds an MD and PhD in molecular medicine from the Boston University School of Medicine. Dr. Dworkis is the founder of The  Emergency Mind Podcast , and the author of The Emergency Mind: Wiring Your Brain for Performance Under Pressure. 

    Questions We Asked: 

    • Why did you feel the need to create The Emergency Mind? 
    • Is poise under pressure a learned skill or innate? 
    • What are valuable skills you have learned creating The Emergency Mind? 
    • How does someone successfully improve through a performance loop? 
    • What are ways to decrease stress while performing procedures? 
    • How does the Emergency Mind address team dynamics? 
    • How do you build a well functioning solid team?
    • How do you run a successful debrief?  
    • Advice for medical leaders under pressure? 
    • Book Suggestions? 


    Quotes & Ideas: 

    • Applying knowledge under pressure is a separate learned skill 
    • What happens when you are trying to intubate a patient and miss the first time? How do you recover and make the second attempt? 
    • Prepare-> Perform-> Recover-> Evolve 
    • “Create an environment that sets you up for success” 
    • Experiment and be a scientist of yourself: Build->measure->learn 
    • Exposing yourself to stressful scenarios outside of the hospital can help you build skills to help clinically 
    • Use self-talk to help yourself manage acute stress 
    • When debriefing, learn to separate outcome from performance. You can sometimes have a poor outcome with perfect performance and also a good outcome with poor performance. 
    • Debriefs can use outcome vs. performance on a 2x2 matrix. 
    • Never Waste Suffering. Both ours as providers and the patients. 
    • Harness the wisdom in the room around you 
    • Practice when you are outside of pressure and then slowly introduce it to stressful situations 

    Book Suggestions: 

    • Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel 
    • Sources of Power by Gary Klein 
      • “A Failure to Disagree” paper by both 
    • Ghosts of the Fireground by Peter Leschak 
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あらすじ・解説

Dan Dworkis, MD PhD FACEP is the Chief Medical Officer at the Mission Critical Team Institute, a board-certified emergency physician, and an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC where he works at LAC+USC. He performed his emergency medicine residency with Harvard Medical School at the Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency at Massachusetts General Hospital / Brigham Health, and holds an MD and PhD in molecular medicine from the Boston University School of Medicine. Dr. Dworkis is the founder of The  Emergency Mind Podcast , and the author of The Emergency Mind: Wiring Your Brain for Performance Under Pressure. 

Questions We Asked: 

  • Why did you feel the need to create The Emergency Mind? 
  • Is poise under pressure a learned skill or innate? 
  • What are valuable skills you have learned creating The Emergency Mind? 
  • How does someone successfully improve through a performance loop? 
  • What are ways to decrease stress while performing procedures? 
  • How does the Emergency Mind address team dynamics? 
  • How do you build a well functioning solid team?
  • How do you run a successful debrief?  
  • Advice for medical leaders under pressure? 
  • Book Suggestions? 


Quotes & Ideas: 

  • Applying knowledge under pressure is a separate learned skill 
  • What happens when you are trying to intubate a patient and miss the first time? How do you recover and make the second attempt? 
  • Prepare-> Perform-> Recover-> Evolve 
  • “Create an environment that sets you up for success” 
  • Experiment and be a scientist of yourself: Build->measure->learn 
  • Exposing yourself to stressful scenarios outside of the hospital can help you build skills to help clinically 
  • Use self-talk to help yourself manage acute stress 
  • When debriefing, learn to separate outcome from performance. You can sometimes have a poor outcome with perfect performance and also a good outcome with poor performance. 
  • Debriefs can use outcome vs. performance on a 2x2 matrix. 
  • Never Waste Suffering. Both ours as providers and the patients. 
  • Harness the wisdom in the room around you 
  • Practice when you are outside of pressure and then slowly introduce it to stressful situations 

Book Suggestions: 

  • Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel 
  • Sources of Power by Gary Klein 
    • “A Failure to Disagree” paper by both 
  • Ghosts of the Fireground by Peter Leschak 

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