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A National Survey of Burnout and Depression Among Fellows Training in Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine

Authors :
Scott M. Lieberman
Kristin M. Burkart
Kerry L. Neall
Schartess Culpepper Pace
Apostolos Kontzias
Judith A. Furlong
Morgan I. Soffler
Rahul G. Argula
Maria Danila
Mark H. Adelman
Joseph Barney
Lynn M. Petruzzi
Matthew C. Baker
Charles D. Burger
Chadwick R. Johr
Elliot Rosenstein
Robert Vassallo
Stephen Doyle
Gregory P. Downey
Gretchen Winter
Thomas Eckmann
Jeanne Dale
Richard A. Helmers
Stanley Pillemer
Alan Baer
Tamiko Katsumoto
Keith J. Robinson
Amit Sachdev
Robert M. Kotloff
Vasileios C. Kyttaris
Rendell W. Ashton
Rachana Krishna
Sara S. McCoy
Nora Sandorfi
Kristin A. Riekert
Stamatina J. Danielides
Elizabeth R. Volkmann
Heidi Kukla
Timothy Niewold
Donald Bloch
Jennifer W. McCallister
Michelle Sharp
Jerome L. Greene
Robert I. Fox
Malik M. Khurram S. Khan
Sandra E. Zaeh
Michelle N. Eakin
Kristen L. Veraldi
Stuart S. Kassan
Peter H. Lenz
Daniel J. Wallace
Evelyn J. Bromet
Edward L. Treadwell
Robert F. Spiera
Adrian Shifren
Theresa Lawrence Ford
W. Neal Roberts
Jacqueline O’Toole
Senada Arabelovic
Matthew Koslow
Janet Lewis
Philip Cohen
Rebecca C. Keith
Thomas G. Osborn
Sarah Schafer
Justin C. Hewlett
Paul F. Dellaripa
Scott Zashin
Ruben Peredo-Wende
Chokkalingam Siva
Jay H. Ryu
Jeffrey J. Swigris
Lee Daugherty Biddison
Cynthia S. Rand
Barbara Segal
Daniel Small
Gerald W. Staton
Thomas Grader-Beck
Ghaith Noaiseh
Frederick B. Vivino
Tracy Luckhardt
James Gagermeier
Robert W. Ward
James Topilow
Kirsten Koons
Gabriel T. Bosslet
Source :
Chest. 159:733-742
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background The prevalence of burnout and depressive symptoms is high among physician trainees. Research Question What is the burden of burnout and depressive symptoms among fellows training in pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) and what are associated individual fellow, program, and institutional characteristics? Study Design and Methods We conducted a cross-sectional electronic survey of fellows enrolled in pulmonary, PCCM, and critical care medicine training programs in the United States to assess burnout and depressive symptoms. Burnout symptoms were measured using the Maslach Burnout Index two-item measure. The two-item Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders Procedure was used to screen for depressive symptoms. For each of the two outcomes (burnout and depressive symptoms), we constructed three multivariate logistic regression models to assess individual fellow characteristics, program structure, and institutional polices associated with either burnout or depressive symptoms. Results Five hundred two of the 976 fellows who received the survey completed it—including both outcome measures—giving a response rate of 51%. Fifty percent of fellows showed positive results for either burnout or depressive symptoms, with 41% showing positive results for depressive symptoms, 32% showing positive results for burnout, and 23% showing positive results for both. Reporting a coverage system in the case of personal illness or emergency (adjusted OR [aOR], 0.44; 95% CI, 0.26-0.73) and access to mental health services (aOR, 0.14; 95% CI, 0.04-0.47) were associated with lower odds of burnout. Financial concern was associated with higher odds of depressive symptoms (aOR, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.05-1.22). Working more than 70 hours in an average clinical week and the burdens of electronic health record (EHR) documentation were associated with a higher odds of both burnout and depressive symptoms. Interpretation Given the high prevalence of burnout and depressive symptoms among fellows training in PCCM, an urgent need exists to identify solutions that address this public health crisis. Strategies such as providing an easily accessible coverage system, access to mental health resources, reducing EHR burden, addressing work hours, and addressing financial concerns among trainees may help to reduce burnout or depressive symptoms and should be studied further by the graduate medical education community.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
159
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........be64614a589ac0a25ca3b5b9c1784401