by Richard Gunderman, The Conversation
Running on fumes? Credit: www.shutterstock.com
The prevalence of burnout in medicine appears to be high. One 2012 study showed that 46% of physicians report at least one symptom of burnout. Moreover, burnout is more common among physicians than other highly educated groups.
Psychologist Christina Maslach and colleagues have identified components of burnout, including exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy, the sense that one's efforts are not making a difference.
They call the opposite state engagement. Engaged physicians operate with a high energy level, a strong sense of involvement, and a conviction that their work makes a difference.
There is little doubt that burnout among physicians is a problem. For one thing, it adversely impacts work performance. It is also associated with poor health, including higher rates of stress-related diseases. It is even linked to cognitive impairments, such as reduced attention levels and memory deficits.
Being cared for by a burnt out physician is bad for patients. For example, burnout is associated with lower patient satisfaction levels, longer post-surgical recovery times, and increased rates of physician-reported errors.
Today medical practices, hospitals, and medical schools are paying more attention to burnout. When it comes to understanding burnout and what can be done about it, the metaphor of a candle offers a number of important insights.
We all know what it takes for a candle to generate light. It needs three things: fuel, oxygen and heat. Allow it to use up all its wax, deprive it of oxygen by snuffing it, or blow enough cool air on it, and the flame will go out. When it does, the candle ceases to generate light and heat.
To generate light, a candle first needs fuel. Physicians' passion for medicine is fueled by many things, but perhaps the most important of all is the opportunity to care for patients. People go into medicine because they want to help others. As physicians feel that they are spending an increasing proportion of their time on activities that do not help patients, they are more and more likely to find themselves running on fumes.
One study of internal medicine residents at a Johns Hopkins-affiliated hospital showed that internal medicine residents are spending on average only eight minutes per day with each patient, but several hours interacting with hospital information systems. Many patients know what it is like to have a physician spend more time looking at a computer screen than at them.
A candle also needs oxygen, which may be likened to the opportunity to make a meaningful difference in the lives of the patients for whom physicians care. To make such a difference, physicians need to know that patients are benefiting from their efforts.
Unfortunately, physicians today are frequently being evaluated by criteria that do not necessarily reflect patient benefit. These criteria include throughput (a term derived from manufacturing), revenue, and compliance with policies and procedures.
Physicians may be retained, promoted, and compensated according to the number of patients they see or the number of procedures they perform, and not so much on the quality of care they provide to individual patients.
In many cases, the use of such criteria may actually undermine the difference physicians are able to make. For example, it may pressure them to practice at a rate so high that they no longer have time to get to know their patients.
A candle also needs heat, and many physicians feel that the warmth of medicine is being sucked away by organizational, economic and political forces that tend to treat patients in aggregate, rather than as individual human beings.
If there is a spark in clinical medicine, it tends to arise from the relationship between an individual patient and an individual physician. When that relationship is short-circuited, it is only natural that physicians' ardor for their profession diminishes.
If the profession of medicine is to remain healthy and patients are to enjoy high-quality care, it is vital that health care leaders grasp the importance of strong patient-physician relationships, as embodied in medicine's foundational document, the Hippocratic Oath.
Though perhaps 2,500 years old, the Hippocratic Oath makes abundantly clear that the physician's core responsibility is not to the government, health insurance companies, or hospitals and health systems, but to the patients for whom they care.
Simply put, it is possible for physicians to generate a great deal of warmth and light through the practice of medicine without burning themselves out, but only if they operate with a deep and inspiring understanding of who they are really responsible to.
Explore further: Physicians should be aware of signs of burnout
More information: "Burnout and Satisfaction With Work-Life Balance Among US Physicians Relative to the General US Population" Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(18):1377-1385. DOI: 10.1001/archinternmed.2012.3199
This story is published courtesy of The Conversation (under Creative Commons-Attribution/No derivatives).
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by Richard Gunderman, The Conversation
Running on fumes? Credit: www.shutterstock.com
The prevalence of burnout in medicine appears to be high. One 2012 study showed that 46% of physicians report at least one symptom of burnout. Moreover, burnout is more common among physicians than other highly educated groups.
Psychologist Christina Maslach and colleagues have identified components of burnout, including exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy, the sense that one's efforts are not making a difference.
They call the opposite state engagement. Engaged physicians operate with a high energy level, a strong sense of involvement, and a conviction that their work makes a difference.
There is little doubt that burnout among physicians is a problem. For one thing, it adversely impacts work performance. It is also associated with poor health, including higher rates of stress-related diseases. It is even linked to cognitive impairments, such as reduced attention levels and memory deficits.
Being cared for by a burnt out physician is bad for patients. For example, burnout is associated with lower patient satisfaction levels, longer post-surgical recovery times, and increased rates of physician-reported errors.
Today medical practices, hospitals, and medical schools are paying more attention to burnout. When it comes to understanding burnout and what can be done about it, the metaphor of a candle offers a number of important insights.
We all know what it takes for a candle to generate light. It needs three things: fuel, oxygen and heat. Allow it to use up all its wax, deprive it of oxygen by snuffing it, or blow enough cool air on it, and the flame will go out. When it does, the candle ceases to generate light and heat.
To generate light, a candle first needs fuel. Physicians' passion for medicine is fueled by many things, but perhaps the most important of all is the opportunity to care for patients. People go into medicine because they want to help others. As physicians feel that they are spending an increasing proportion of their time on activities that do not help patients, they are more and more likely to find themselves running on fumes.
One study of internal medicine residents at a Johns Hopkins-affiliated hospital showed that internal medicine residents are spending on average only eight minutes per day with each patient, but several hours interacting with hospital information systems. Many patients know what it is like to have a physician spend more time looking at a computer screen than at them.
A candle also needs oxygen, which may be likened to the opportunity to make a meaningful difference in the lives of the patients for whom physicians care. To make such a difference, physicians need to know that patients are benefiting from their efforts.
Unfortunately, physicians today are frequently being evaluated by criteria that do not necessarily reflect patient benefit. These criteria include throughput (a term derived from manufacturing), revenue, and compliance with policies and procedures.
Physicians may be retained, promoted, and compensated according to the number of patients they see or the number of procedures they perform, and not so much on the quality of care they provide to individual patients.
In many cases, the use of such criteria may actually undermine the difference physicians are able to make. For example, it may pressure them to practice at a rate so high that they no longer have time to get to know their patients.
A candle also needs heat, and many physicians feel that the warmth of medicine is being sucked away by organizational, economic and political forces that tend to treat patients in aggregate, rather than as individual human beings.
If there is a spark in clinical medicine, it tends to arise from the relationship between an individual patient and an individual physician. When that relationship is short-circuited, it is only natural that physicians' ardor for their profession diminishes.
If the profession of medicine is to remain healthy and patients are to enjoy high-quality care, it is vital that health care leaders grasp the importance of strong patient-physician relationships, as embodied in medicine's foundational document, the Hippocratic Oath.
Though perhaps 2,500 years old, the Hippocratic Oath makes abundantly clear that the physician's core responsibility is not to the government, health insurance companies, or hospitals and health systems, but to the patients for whom they care.
Simply put, it is possible for physicians to generate a great deal of warmth and light through the practice of medicine without burning themselves out, but only if they operate with a deep and inspiring understanding of who they are really responsible to.
Explore further: Physicians should be aware of signs of burnout
More information: "Burnout and Satisfaction With Work-Life Balance Among US Physicians Relative to the General US Population" Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(18):1377-1385. DOI: 10.1001/archinternmed.2012.3199
This story is published courtesy of The Conversation (under Creative Commons-Attribution/No derivatives).
Medical Xpress on facebook
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Physicians should be aware of signs of burnout
Mar 27, 2015
(HealthDay)—Burnout can be prevented if physicians are aware of the warning signs, according to an article published by the American Medical Association.
Frustrated by regulations, doctors increasingly miserable
Mar 11, 2015
(HealthDay)—The nationwide Physician Misery Index is 3.7 out of 5, with the vast majority of physicians reporting that the business and regulation of health care has worsened the practice of medicine, according ...
Survey finds symptoms of burnout common among US physicians
Aug 20, 2012
A national survey of 7,288 physicians (26.7 percent participation rate) finds that 45.8 percent of physicians reported at least one symptom of burnout, according to a report published Online First by Archives of Internal Me ...
Burnout equal among inpatient and outpatient doctors, study finds
Dec 04, 2013
The perception that doctors who are based in hospitals burn out quicker than doctors in outpatient settings is just wrong – doctor burnout happens equally, according to a new Mayo Clinic study, published in the November ...
Physicians hit barriers in making cancer referrals
Jan 20, 2015
(HealthDay)—Many physicians report encountering barriers when referring cancer patients to specialty care, according to research published in the Jan. 1 issue of Cancer.
Recommended for you
Year-round baseball leads to more youth injuries, study says
Apr 04, 2015
(HealthDay)—Being able to play baseball year-round puts young pitchers in the southern United States at increased risk for an overuse injury in their throwing arm, a new study finds.
Easter doesn't have to be a diet disaster
Apr 03, 2015
(HealthDay)—Lots of chocolate and big family meals can make Easter a challenging time for people trying to control their weight.
Key disordered eating info not reaching overweight youth
Apr 03, 2015
(HealthDay)—Eating disorder education needs to reach overweight youth, according to a study published in the April issue of the International Journal of Eating Disorders.
France moves to ban sunbed adverts, access for kids
Apr 03, 2015
France's parliament approved a draft law Friday banning advertising for artificial tanning beds and salons, and prohibiting people under 18 from using to the popular yet potentially dangerous ultraviolet technology.
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