A systematic review of burnout and its relation to work-life balance and scheduling among United States physicians
Autor: | M. Jensen Horan, Noelle Provenzano, Patrick Ramirez, Kelsey Reely, Clinton Jones, Kendall Hammonds, Nikhil Seth, Evan Reinhart, Shamyal Khan, Patrick McGrade, Kristen Dowdy |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles. 8:40-46 |
ISSN: | 2325-9205 2011-2017 |
DOI: | 10.12746/swrccc.v8i34.663 |
Popis: | Physician burnout has increasingly been recognized as a multifactorial issue leading to detrimental outcomes for both the physician and patients being treated. Burnout is defined as “a pathological syndrome in which emotional depletion and maladaptive detachment develop in response to prolonged occupational stress”. It has been proven that poor work-life balance (WBL), a state in which personal and professional life are in a state of imbalance, is connected to burnout. Upwards of 61% of all U.S. physicians are dissatisfied with their WBL. Burnout rates among physicians are correlated with frequency of work-home conflicts leading to greater dissatisfaction of their WLB. With the prevalence of burnout among US physicians ranging between 34-76%, addressing modifiable causes such as optimizing WLB should be a priority for administrators. In this systematic review, we explore the importance of creating schedules that prioritize protecting physicians’ WLB as a means to decrease burnout and the associated sequelae including medical errors, alcohol abuse, and depression. After identifying 202 studies through PubMed; data from 21 articles published between 2011-2017 were analyzed. We found that schedules that emphasize the following were protective of physician WBL |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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