key: cord-0949607-zg11h5xt authors: McDonnell, Erin P.; Berger, Rebecca S.; Corbett, Corinne R.; Coppola, Kristen M.; Brodt‐Ciner, Zahava Nilly title: Medical students' motivations to help older adults during the COVID‐19 pandemic date: 2021-03-05 journal: J Am Geriatr Soc DOI: 10.1111/jgs.17077 sha: cd89f0b27450f0647870192ca91a53a9577d6195 doc_id: 949607 cord_uid: zg11h5xt nan Across the globe, the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues to disproportionately impact the older population. Adults aged 65 years and older are at a greater risk of contracting the virus due to close living quarters in long-term care facilities, a less robust immune system, and a systemic unawareness of their unique health needs. 1, 2 Ironically, the continued social distancing mandate may present as a risk factor for poorer mental and physical health outcomes among older adults. 3, 4 The pandemic has also impacted the medical student experience. Clinical rotations were halted abruptly, leaving students with limited patient interaction during a time when exposure to patients is critical for their personal and professional development. 5 Social distancing guidelines have placed both the older population and medical students in an unusual and troubling position. The pandemic has elucidated an unaddressed problem with respect to socially isolated older adults, simultaneously leaving medical students willing and able to assist without knowing how to help. 6 Our initiative at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS), "Caring Companions" (CC), connected medical students with older patients in the Rutgers RWJMS General Internal Medicine practice. The CC pilot was created at the onset of the pandemic and recruited medical students to volunteer and make weekly telephone calls to patients. Telephone initiatives such as CC represent cost-effective and easily implementable solutions to ameliorate the consequences of isolation in the older population, simultaneously providing medical students quality experiences through engagement with persons aged 65 years and older. Other medical schools have also recognized this opportunity and created similar telephone initiatives to connect medical students to older adults. [7] [8] [9] Although prior research on medical student telephone initiatives with older adults during the pandemic has examined benefits to both students and older adults, little is known about why students choose to volunteer with older adults. We examine student motivations to provide medical schools with insight on how to engage student volunteers with the older population during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. An email was sent to Rutgers RWJMS students seeking volunteers for the CC initiative at the onset of the pandemic in April, 2020. Interested students completed a questionnaire indicating their year in school, professional interest, and motivation to participate in CC. Seventy-one students signed up to volunteer (39% 1st year, 11% 2nd year, 29% 3rd year, and 21% 4th year). Students' open-ended responses were deidentified and classified using the six functional motivations for volunteering detailed in the Volunteer Functions Inventory 10 : Values, Understanding, Enhancement, Protective, Career, and Social. A total of 100 statements (39% of students gave multiple reasons) were coded and reported. The main motivations for participation (62% of responses) were classified as "Value-based" reasons, including concerns for the older population and compassion toward their isolation during social distancing mandates. Of the responses, 17% were related to "Understanding," with many students wanting to learn about older adults through practicing communication skills. Interestingly, 17% also reported motivations concerning "enhancement" and "protective" aspects of the self, including feeling needed or having a purpose. Only 4% reported wanting to gain experience that could help in their "Career." None of the participants reported "Social" motivators. Further examination of the "Values" category revealed subthemes of meeting the mental health needs of older adults or familial experience (e.g., losing a family Values: Concern and compassion for older adults facing isolation. "I just want to be there for the patients. My grandmother was just placed on hospice because of COVID. We couldn't be there. We couldn't even have a conversation with her before she deteriorated so bad she couldn't speak. That should never happen. No one should ever have to go through something like this alone." "I recognize how lonely the quarantine can get even when you are with your whole family. I want to use this opportunity to have some impact through the pandemic and be able to provide company to those who need it the most!" "I want to ensure the at risk don't suffer as much from isolation." "Helping someone feel less alone. My fiancée's grandpa just passed from COVID-19 and we know our check ins with him helped lift his spirits." Understanding: Desire to practice communication with older adults. "I believe that this experience will inform me a lot about holistic patient care. As a future medical professional, I understand that taking care of patients includes their emotional and mental wellbeing." "Just better empathy for patients/elderly experiences." year is getting to interact with patients, which honestly often boosted my selfesteem. Due to the pandemic, I have missed these experiences, and this has led to personal dissatisfaction. I hope this experience allows me to regain the feeling of doing something meaningful in the lives of patients." "The feeling that I was able to contribute to this crisis in some way." "Make someone feel less anxious and lonely, and know that I made a small difference." Protective: A way of protecting the ego from the difficulties of life. "During this pandemic, I have felt a distraught and powerless because I am not yet able to help clinically. I want to do what I can to help the community, especially members who are most vulnerable." "Since I am unable to offer any assistance within the health care setting during this pandemic, I am trying to find other ways I can help others during this sensitive time. I know a lot of people are struggling with uncertainty, anxiety and even boredom right now (as am I) and I would like to help alleviate some of that burden in any way I can. I think this would be a great opportunity for myself to do something to help, and would also gain emotional support by having someone new to talk to myself." "I feel so unable to help during this pandemic when so many others are making more sacrifices than me." "I am looking for some more social connection during this time-I find that I am having trouble feeling useful and hearing about this opportunity gave me hope that I can still contribute while feeling "stuck" in my medical education and life. Ideally I'll make a friend in the nearby community!" Career: Gain experience to help as a future physician. "Considering Internal Medicine/Geriatrics as a career-hope to learn more about the geriatric patients and their needs (outside of medical needs) and hope to help during a hard/scary time." "I hope to improve my bedside manner and develop new ways to express empathy to my patients." "I will be pursuing Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation where a large portion of our patient population is geriatric, so this will help me refine my skills in providing comfort and building rapport with this population." Social: Volunteering because others think it is important. 0% member). Table 1 depicts the types of student responses coded as each factor. Students also reported a total of 17 different professional interests, including 20% for internal medicine, 13% for pediatrics, and 20% undecided. Our findings indicated that medical students across all 4 years of their curricula, with a wide variety of professional interests, were mostly motivated by their values to help isolated older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most respondents shared at least one reason stemming from their values (vs other motives, such as career). A closer examination of the Values category revealed that the emergent need caused by the pandemic and the recognition that older adults are at a high risk of mental health issues were important factors to our volunteers. Seeing family or friends who were older adults who had suffered already was also an important subtheme. This information will serve medical schools to better understand how to engage their student body to bridge the gap in exposure with older adults, simultaneously providing medical students with opportunities to foster their professional identity through important servicelearning activities. Medical students' experiences with older patients, combined with their evident application of values to these interactions, can enrich their perceptions of an important patient population that many students will ultimately spend their futures caring for. Geriatric care during public health emergencies: lessons learned from novel Corona virus disease (COVID-19) pandemic COVID-19 and the consequences of isolating the elderly Loneliness as a public health issue: the impact of loneliness on health care utilization among older adults Social distancing in covid-19: what are the mental health implications? The role of medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic A review of social isolation: an important but underassessed condition in older adults Reducing social isolation of seniors during COVID-19 through medical student telephone contact Combating heightened social isolation of nursing home elders: the telephone outreach in the COVID-19 outbreak program Medical student mobilization during a pandemic: the Ochsner clinical school response to COVID-19 Understanding and assessing the motivations of volunteers: a functional approach Medical students' motivations to help older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic We thank the medical students for their time and dedication to volunteering, as well as the patients in the General Internal Medicine group for agreeing to take part in this initiative. The authors have no conflicts.