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Extinguishing burnout: National analysis of predictors and effects of burnout in abdominal transplant surgery fellows

Authors :
Christopher J. Sonnenday
Leah K. Winer
Michael J. Englesbe
Christopher M. Jones
Kendra D. Conzen
Markus Selzner
Alexander R. Cortez
Al-Faraaz Kassam
Kelly Collins
André A. S. Dick
Anthony C. Watkins
Ashraf El-Hinnawi
Chandra Bhati
Ralph C. Quillin
Tayyab S. Diwan
Lea Matsuoka
Source :
American Journal of Transplantation. 21:307-313
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Burnout among surgeons has been attributed to increased workload and decreased autonomy. Although prior studies have examined burnout among transplant surgeons, no studies have evaluated burnout in abdominal transplant surgery fellows. The objective of our study was to identify predictors of burnout and understand its impact on personal and patient care during fellowship. A survey was sent to all abdominal transplant surgery fellows in an American Society of Transplant Surgeons-accredited fellowship. The response rate was 59.2% (n = 77) and 22.7% (n = 17) of fellows met criteria for burnout. Fellows with lower grit scores were more likely to exhibit burnout compared with fellows with higher scores (3.6 vs 4.0, P = .026). Those with burnout were more likely to work >100 hours per week (58.8% vs 27.6%, P = .023), have severe work-related stress (58.8% vs 22.4%, P = .010), consider quitting fellowship (94.1% vs 20.7%, P < .001), or make a medical error (35.3% vs 5.2%, P = .003). This national analysis of abdominal transplant fellows found that burnout rates are relatively low, but few fellows engage in self-care. Personal and program-related factors attribute to burnout and it has unacceptable effects on patient care. Transplant societies and fellowship programs should develop interventions to give fellows tools to prevent and combat burnout.

Details

ISSN :
16006135
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....76d1f8350f9e0d2dbecc5ffec6ac8e66
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.16075