1. The Impact of Patient Deaths on General Surgeons’ Psychosocial Well-Being and Surgical Practices
- Author
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Cihangir Akyol, Suleyman Utku Celik, Mehmet Ali Koc, Duygu Sezen Bayindir, Mehmet Ali Gocer, Buket Karakurt, Mustafa Kaya, Sena Nur Kekec, and Furkan Aydin Simsek
- Subjects
burnout – professional ,death & dying ,emotional distress ,general surgery ,well-being ,psychosocial support ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
BackgroundPatient deaths are an unavoidable occurrence in surgical practice. Although these events have negative effects on patients and their families, they can also have a profound adverse impact on surgeons who are unprepared for these deep emotional experiences. This study aims to investigate the impact of patient deaths on general surgeons’ psychosocial well-being and surgical practices.MethodsA national cross-sectional survey of a 30-item questionnaire was conducted. The survey evaluated the surgeons’ demographics, professional and practice characteristics, and the impact of patient deaths on their emotional well-being, professional career, and social life.ResultsFour hundred eighty participants completed the survey. One-third of the participants reported that patient deaths affected their emotional well-being, 23.3% reported that patient deaths affected their social life, and 34.2% reported that patient deaths affected their professional career. Surgeons who reported suffering from the emotional impact of death exhibited no differences in terms of place of practice, academic title, surgical experience, work hours, or annual surgical volume. Middle-aged surgeons (p = 0.004), females (p = 0.041), and surgeons who reported feeling burned out (p
- Published
- 2022
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