Work In Progress

Calm at the centre of the storm

A line illustration of a human head. Inside the head is a black cloud with scribbles inside the cloud.

Illustration by Getty Images-stellalevi

When a patient arrives in trauma room at , the ability to focus on what鈥檚 important while tuning out distractions can be a matter of life and death.

Strategies such as breathing techniques, planning, and leaning on experience and teamwork work together to limit cognitive overload and help Dr. Szulewski cope with the huge amount of emotion, stress, anxiety, and uncertainty he often faces in the emergency department.

鈥淲hen I鈥檓 in a resuscitation room, all my energy is focused on trying to help this one person,鈥 he says.

鈥淚n a system where things can be chaotic, you need to have approaches to identify when you feel stressed and overwhelmed, so you can use them to be as effective as possible. For example, when I鈥檓 resuscitating a patient, announcements on the hospital鈥檚 overhead speaker system about a chemical spill or missing patient on another ward are pure noise. This used to bother me, but I鈥檝e developed an ability to tune these types of irrelevant distractions out completely.鈥

Now an associate professor in Queen鈥檚 emergency medicine and psychology departments and Fellowship Director, Resuscitation and Reanimation, Dr. Szulewski can trace the origins of his research on these strategies back to his days as a resident physician. He鈥檇 watch his emergency-room mentors almost instinctively pause and gather their thoughts by doing a 鈥渞ecap鈥 where they summarized the treatment and discussed next steps with everyone in the room.

鈥淚t provided a bit of a silence for a second and then people would come up with ideas and we鈥檇 go from there 鈥 it was almost like taking a collective breath in a way,鈥 says Dr. Szulewski. 鈥淚t offered the leader a way to deal with the cognitive load of managing the case as well as helping all the individuals in the room. It鈥檚 something that developed organically in resuscitation medicine, but we鈥檙e seeing big parallels in sports and in other domains: for example, when a basketball player pauses and takes deep breaths at the free-throw line.鈥

In a system where things can be chaotic, you need to have approaches to identify when you feel stressed and overwhelmed, so you can use them to be as effective as possible.

Dr. Adam Szulewski

Understanding the ways to avoid cognitive overload starts by delving into the three main types of human memory: sensory, long-term, and working. Sensory memory refers to all the transitory stimuli your brain receives and quickly discards, such as tastes, smells, and noises, while long-term memory holds all of a person鈥檚 stored information. In between the two lies the working memory that interests Dr. Szulewski, where all the complex thinking happens.

His work also builds on the research of Nobel Prize winner and Princeton University professor emeritus , who developed a theory of System 1 and System 2 processing. The first relates to recognizing patterns in about 90 per cent of situations, which allows automatic processing of information, while the second occurs when people face unfamiliar or unexpected situations when they need to think to respond.

Dr. Szulewski鈥檚 research centres on the ways learning and experience help reorganize the mind鈥檚 information systems, so that basic skills become so ingrained and automatic that they allow more brainpower to be applied where it鈥檚 really needed.

Although his research focuses on achieving a better understanding of physicians鈥 decision-making under pressure, the lessons learned apply to almost any complex professional field, or even when something completely unexpected comes up in everyday life.

Dr. Szulewski likens this to people turning down the radio in their car to increase their ability to concentrate on driving in a worsening snowstorm or when someone simply asks for quiet because they need to think.

鈥淐ertainly, if I have time to breathe and to relax, that鈥檚 going to help. I think there is something to be said for having a general approach to uncertainty, which is something that we get very comfortable with in resuscitation and emergency medicine,鈥 he says.

鈥淎s we develop and mature as human beings, we acquire different experiences that help us listen to our 鈥榮pidey sense鈥 to know when we need to slow down and think things through. At the end of the day, we鈥檙e all humans, we all have the same type of brain, and we all need the same kinds of pauses and resets.鈥

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