Doctors experiencing burnout are twice as likely to be involved in patient safety incidents and four times more likely to be dissatisfied with their job, suggests research published today by The BMJ.
The scale of burnout among clinicians and the serious impact it can have on patient safety and staff turnover has been revealed in the largest and most comprehensive systematic review and analysis of studies on the subject to date.
Previous studies have highlighted concerns that burnout—defined as emotional exhaustion, cynicism and detachment from the job, and a feeling of reduced personal accomplishment—is reaching global epidemic levels among physicians. Their representatives have warned that spare capacity in the field of medicine is nearing what they call the crisis point.
In the UK, a third of trainee doctors report that they experience burnout to a high or very high degree, while in the US, 4 in 10 physicians report at least one symptom of burnout. And in a recent review of low and middle income countries the overall single-point prevalence of burnout ranged from 2.5% to 87.9% among 43 studies.
Yet there is a lack of evidence about the association of burnout with how engaged a physician is with their job (career engagement) and how that potentially impacts on the quality of patient care.
To address this, a team of researchers based in the UK and Greece set out to examine the association of burnout with the career engagement of physicians and the quality of patient care globally.
To do this, they selected and analyzed the results of 170 observational studies on the subject involving 239,246 physicians.
Their analysis showed that physicians with burnout were up to four times more likely to be dissatisfied with their job and more than three times as likely to have thoughts or intentions to leave their job (turnover) or to regret their career choice.
Equally worrying was the finding that physicians with burnout were twice as likely to be involved in patient safety incidents and show low professionalism, snl obama paxil spoof and over twice as likely to receive low satisfaction ratings from patients.
The analysis also found that burnout and poorer job satisfaction was greatest in hospital settings, physicians aged 31–50 years, and those working in emergency medicine and intensive care, while burnout was lowest in general practitioners.
The association between burnout and patient safety incidents was greatest in physicians aged 20–30 years, and people working in emergency medicine.
The study authors acknowledge some limitations in their research including the fact that precise definitions of terms, such as patient safety, professionalism, and job satisfaction, varied between the studies analyzed so may have led to some overestimation of their association with burnout.
Also, the tools or questionnaires used to assess outcomes varied considerably among the 170 studies, and the design of the original studies imposed limits on their ability to establish causal links between physician burnout and patient care or career engagement.
Nevertheless, the authors conclude, “Burnout is a strong predictor for career disengagement in physicians as well as for patient care. Moving forward, investment strategies to monitor and improve physician burnout are needed as a means of retaining the health care workforce and improving the quality of patient care.”
“Health care organizations should invest more time and effort in implementing evidence-based strategies to mitigate physician burnout across specialties, and particularly in emergency medicine and for physicians in training or residency,” they add.
This research adds to growing evidence that the poor mental health of health care providers jeopardizes the quality and the safety of patient care, says Matthias Weigl, Professor of Patient Safety at Bonn University, in a linked editorial.
“The pervasive nature of physician burnout indicates a defective work system caused by deep societal problems and structural problems across the sector,” he warns.
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