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'Where You Feel Like a Family Instead of Co-workers': a Mixed Methods Study on Care Teams and Burnout

Authors :
Monica A. Lu
Jacqueline O’Toole
Matthew Shneyderman
Suzanne Brockman
Carolyn Cumpsty-Fowler
Deborah Dang
Carrie Herzke
Cynthia S. Rand
Heather F. Sateia
Erin Van Dyke
Michelle N. Eakin
E. Lee Daugherty Biddison
Source :
Journal of general internal medicine.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Physicians and nurses face high levels of burnout. The role of care teams may be protective against burnout and provide a potential target for future interventions.To explore levels of burnout among physicians and nurses and differences in burnout between physicians and nurses, to understand physician and nurse perspectives of their healthcare teams, and to explore the association of the role of care teams and burnout.A mixed methods study in two school of medicine affiliated teaching hospitals in an urban medical center in Baltimore, Maryland.Participants included 724 physicians and 971 nurses providing direct clinical care to patients.Measures included survey participant characteristics, a single-item burnout measure, and survey questions on care teams and provision of clinical care. Thematic analysis was used to analyze qualitative survey responses from physicians and nurses.Forty-three percent of physicians and nurses screened positive for burnout. Physicians reported more isolation at work than nurses (p0.001), and nurses reported their care teams worked efficiently together more than physicians did (p0.001). Team efficiency was associated with decreased likelihood of burnout (p0.01), and isolation at work was associated with increased likelihood of burnout (p0.001). Free-text responses revealed themes related to care teams, including emphasis on team functioning, team membership, and care coordination and follow-up. Respondents provided recommendations about optimizing care teams including creating consistent care teams, expanding interdisciplinary team members, and increasing clinical support staffing.More team efficiency and less isolation at work were associated with decreased likelihood of burnout. Free-text responses emphasized viewpoints on care teams, suggesting that better understanding care teams may provide insight into physician and nurse burnout.

Subjects

Subjects :
Internal Medicine

Details

ISSN :
15251497
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of general internal medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0bd233c5ad4d09a742bdc4bfff755bf