1. Help Us Help You: Engaging Emergency Physicians to Identify Organizational Strategies to Reduce Burnout
- Author
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Ali S. Raja, Joshua J Baugh, and James K. Takayesu
- Subjects
Educational Advances ,Quality management ,education ,Psychological intervention ,Burnout ,Job Satisfaction ,Documentation ,Intervention (counseling) ,Physicians ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Workplace ,Burnout, Professional ,Medical education ,Academic Medical Centers ,business.industry ,RC86-88.9 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Work Engagement ,Quality Improvement ,Action plan ,Emergency Medicine ,Provider Workforce ,business ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Introduction: Burnout is a major threat to patient care quality and physician career longevity in emergency medicine. We sought to develop and implement a quality improvement process to engage emergency department (ED) faculty in identifying sources of burnout and generating interventions targeted at improving the work environment. Methods: In this prospective interventional study conducted at a large, urban, academic medical center, we surveyed a 60-person faculty group using the Professional Fulfilment Index (PFI), as well as burnout-relevant questions from the American Medical Association’s Mini-Z survey and the Maslach-Leiter framework for organizational burnout, in order to identify organizational sources of burnout. We assessed the relationship between burnout scores and responses to the Maslach-Leiter framework using univariate regression analysis. In a two-hour facilitated session, we shared survey results and led the group in a process using the six Maslach-Leiter domains to develop a rank-ordered list of interventions to reduce burnout in each domain. Results: In total, 47 of 60 faculty (78.3%) completed the survey and 45 faculty (75%) attended the discussion session. Of the 47 survey respondents, 14 (30%) met criteria for moderate to severe burnout. The respondents’ answers to the Maslach-Leiter organizational burnout domain questions were significantly correlated with their burnout scores (P
- Published
- 2021