Physicians and Burnout

This is on the serious side of things but an important one that the lay public does not know about or see,

 

Physicians need to heal thyself…….

 

We all need to take a look at this and reflect……..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Physician Well-beingAddressing Downstream Effects, but Looking Upstream

Lara Goitein, MD1

 

JAMA Intern Med. Published online February 10, 2014. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13253

Text Size: A A A

 

In this issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, West et al1 report results of a randomized clinical trial of an intervention to improve physicians’ psychological well-being. The intervention—a series of small-group discussions—showed success in 2 indicators of distress. But the results also constitute a warning about the growing demoralization of physicians.

The participants were 74 internal medicine physicians at the Mayo Clinic. West et al1 studied whether facilitated discussions in small groups, related to physician well-being and work experience, could reduce burnout and influence other measures of psychological health. (Burnout, characterized by a loss of enthusiasm for work, cynicism, and feelings of low accomplishment, is reported to affect almost half of US physicians.2) The physicians from both the intervention and control arms received 1 hour of paid time every 2 weeks, taken from clinical activities, to use for the discussions—or, in the control group, for any purpose they chose. The intervention lasted 9 months, with 1 year of follow-up.

Compared with the control group, the intervention group showed a substantial and sustained reduction in depersonalization (one of the subscales assessing burnout), which is manifested as a sense of alienation from patients, and better scores on the Empowerment at Work Scale, which measures a sense of control, participation, and meaning. No significant difference was observed in the other measures tested.

Why was the intervention successful, albeit narrowly? There is some evidence that fostering reflection and self-awareness can improve physicians’ sense of well-being.3 In addition, collegiality is associated with physicians’ professional satisfaction, and these small groups may have created an important sense of community.4 In any case, the small-group sessions appear to have been effective in reconnecting many physicians to their patients, and to the worth of their work.

It is interesting to consider the differences between the measures of well-being that did improve compared with the control arm, and the measures that did not. Depersonalization was ascertained by responses to statements such as, “I’ve become more callous toward people since I took this job,” and “I feel I treat some recipients as if they were impersonal objects.” The Empowerment at Work Scale consists of statements such as, “The work I do is meaningful to me.” Both measures could be construed as representing fairly downstream effects of the work environment. In contrast, measures such as emotional exhaustion (which did not differ between the study groups), assessed with statements such as “I feel I’m working too hard on my job,” may more directly represent structural factors such as high patient volume or long hours. If so, small-group discussions may be most useful in modulating physicians’ adaptive responses to stress rather than the stress itself. These downstream effects are important: a sense of alienation from patients and lack of meaning are surely destructive to good care.

But the shadow of the upstream stress haunts this study, mostly in the findings in the control group and the nonparticipants. The study was timed with annual departmental surveys so that on 2 occasions, 4 measures of well-being—meaning at work, depersonalization, emotional exhaustion, and quality of life—were determined in both study participants (intervention and control groups) and nonparticipants. The control group did much better than the nonparticipants, suggesting that benefit was derived just from having paid protected time away from clinical responsibilities. Can it be that faculty are so overloaded that taking 1 hour every 2 weeks has such an effect?

Of more concern, the 350 physicians who did not participate in the study but responded to annual departmental surveys appear to have had an alarming decrease in all 4 measures of well-being in just 1 year. The exact numbers are not given, but Figure 2 suggests a reduction in finding meaning in work and large increases in emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and overall burnout; reporting poor quality of life also rose. In addition, when the same authors surveyed Mayo internal medicine faculty members for another study just 3 years earlier, 34% met criteria for burnout5—far less than the 47% at this study’s baseline.

It is apparent that faculty physicians’ morale is under assault, and there is no reason to think the situation is worse at the Mayo Clinic than elsewhere (and some reason to think it might be better). How can this be explained? The years during which this study took place saw an acceleration in trends affecting hospitals: (1) Hospitals have increasingly emphasized clinical productivity as a means to stay afloat financially. According to annual reports, the Mayo Clinic increased inpatient and outpatient volume during the study. (2) Resident duty-hour restrictions have shifted clinical workload to faculty at the expense of teaching and research,6 with duty-hour restrictions tightened in July 2011. (3) Obtaining funding for research has become more competitive as federal support dwindles, and shrinkage was at its highest during this study. (4) Quality of care has come under increasing scrutiny, and physicians and hospitals are subject to a growing array of externally imposed standards and reporting requirements. The Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program, a large pay-for-performance program from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, began performance evaluation during the study. (5) As hospitals attempt to recover from the economic crisis of 2008 and from public payment shortfalls, physicians are increasingly asked to prioritize the financial health of their organizations, contributing to the phenomenon of the “physician as double agent.”7

These factors combine to create a higher clinical workload, threaten teaching and research activities, increase oversight and reporting requirements, and dilute physician advocacy for patients, all of which could certainly affect physician well-being.

Most important, I suspect that physician well-being is a powerful correlate of patient well-being and attitudes. There are many reasons to become a physician, but for most, the first is that we want to help people. Physician satisfaction is associated with the perception of being able to provide high-quality care—and there is a strong correlation between physician and patient satisfaction.8 This is almost always explained as a causal relationship in one direction: more satisfied physicians provide better care and, therefore, have more satisfied patients. But I am certain that when factors beyond the control of either physicians or patients reduce the time and attention physicians can give to their patients, or make patients resentful or distrustful, that is profoundly demoralizing to physicians.

In my experience, physicians today feel guilty that they cannot spend enough time with each patient. They are embarrassed that short shifts and multiple providers threaten the continuity of care and that their patients often are not even sure who their physician is. They are dismayed that, based on insurance, some patients have too little medical care, while others are burdened with overtreatment and iatrogenesis. They are appalled by the financial burden their patients and their families experience. They, like their patients, have a sense that our titanic health care system no longer primarily supports the physician-patient dyad but serves myriad external interests.

The study by West et al1 demonstrates that a well-designed, institutionally supported curriculum can ameliorate those downstream symptoms of physician distress that are perhaps most detrimental to patient care. But we would do well not to forget to look upstream.

 

 

 

Standard

Pancakes and DADS

This morning was “Pancake Palooza” at my children’s school.  This event is a father sponsored, once a year fundraiser, organized and executed by Kolter elementary fathers.  This was my third year participating as a very proud father. The past two years I was fortunate to be on the front line giving food to the little kiddies and looking at the smile on their faces. This year however I was assigned to cook the pancakes, thereafter I was assigned to help wash dishes, which I proudly took on the responsibility for the sake of the children, “I took for one for the kiddo’s”.

I did make an observation that several mothers came behind the kitchen to take pictures of us cooking and doing dishes.  As the day went on, it came to my awareness that I felt like I was at the zoo? Why would that be?  Many of the mothers were so surprized that we actually can cook and clean and do dishes?

  This is what really bothers me and lifts my skirt up.  It appears that the discussion up front was how amazed mothers were that the fathers there could actually cook, clean and do dishes? They were laughing because men cannot multi-task??? I do not understand where this level of arrogance of ignorance comes from, however I would say although biased, that many of the men I work with and save lives with can cook for their children, make their lunches and give orders to the intensive care unit for someone with a heart attack, acute heart failure, or call in a prescription, and since I am at these task, also pay my online bills. There was definately a different ambiance of a dad run program versus a mother ran program.  I remember us father’s all walking in and asking, what do you need for me to do, how can I help?  As opposed to the mother run programs of arguing and grandstanding regarding what is the best spoon to use for the pancakes, the best pots and whom will give orders and whom will execute orders?  I don’t get it? Is not the mission of fund raising for the kids and not about the “relational aggression”?

The last remaining fathers stayed behind after packing up and I asked several questions, compared to last year how did we do this year?( We doubled our donations) why do we fathers only have one event? everyone had a great time and would gladly volunteer for another event, while brainstorming, I came up with the idea of having a chili cook-off. What better event than everyone bringing together their favorite chili recipe, awarding winners and selling cups of chili for fund raising?  Well this is already being discussed with the principal.  Maybe my course work at Wharton Business school is actually paying off?

Standard

just a man

Hello world,

I am starting this blog on behalf of all men, I know one can find just about anything written about women and women’s experience, but there are no voice for the common man whom loves their children, values life and more importantly cherishes family and good friends, we have the passion of dogs, but we are not all dogs, what I mean by that is that we are loyal and committed to  these things that are self-evident. I am going to write freely with no filter, those of you whom are offended, get over it, we have constitutional laws regarding my freedom of speech, if you do not like what I write, then don’t read it, in the famous words of a few good men;

“You can’t handle the truth”

I plan on trying this purely as a social experiment, after going through a divorce many years ago, my counselor was right, writing your thoughts in indeed therapeutic, so hang on to your tampons, diapers, etc, this is going to get real!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I plan on writing about my experiences in daily life, trials,tribulations, observations and weird ass shit I see or that people say, it is a crazy dysfunctional world we live in, and someone has to say this…

I have paid so much more attention to the world of women lately these days, and I owe that to my wonderful daughter, I love her and I am deathly afraid of the world that will influence her outside of my time with her. I fear the day She comes home and ask me for a pair of clear, plastic heels, or I turn on the TV and there my princess is doing an infomercial lifting her tank top up for “Girls gone Wild”!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I can only think of when I arrive at the check out line at the store and every magazine is either Kim kardashian or a blond hair, blue eyed, size two actress. Who set these standards and why are men always being blamed for womens self image??? There are not average guys like me making the decision of whom should be on these covers,,, most of the time its pale,male and stale or females whom have their own psychological issues with body image and project it on to the world. My case and point, I attend as many events for my daughter as possible, even as a cardiologist, I find myself usually one of two or three guys at the event, the rest of course are women usually females, late twenties, in their thirties or early forties, while looking out at my daughter playing I overhear some of the mothers commenting on how that third grader is “sooo Chubby” This makes me wonder, is that what superficial women spend their time with? I can confess to you that us fathers, none of us are commenting about the chubby girls, their hair, shoes, fashion sense, etc. we just love to watch them in their natural habitat, clummsy, awkward and angelic, who knows, those “chubby” little girls can grow up to be swans as teenagers that us dads are so proud of.

I coined a new phrase today, Girl on Girl Violence that can be physical, emotional, mental and social. since women don’t tend to pick physical fights my observations are that they spend most of their time in the emotional, mental and social girl on girl violence. My new word I learned today is “relational aggression”

Take a look, I know you have seen some of these women out there, as adults, not children yet they are very much, “mean Girls”

Jump to: navigation, search Relational aggression, also known as covert aggression,[1] or covert bullying[2] is a type of aggression in which harm is caused through damage to one’s relationships or social status.[2][3] Although it can be used in many contexts and among different age groups, relational aggression among adolescents, in particular, has received a lot of attention with the help of popular media including movies like Mean Girls and books like Odd Girl Out by R. Simmons (2003) and Queen Bees and Wannabes by R. Wiseman (2003). Relational aggression can have various lifelong consequences. Relational aggression has been primarily observed and studied among girls.[3]

more:

Overview[edit]Peers become increasingly significant in adolescence. Peer relationships are especially important for adolescents’ healthy psychological development: peers provide many new behavioral models and feedback essential for successful identity formation and development of one’s sense of self.[4][5] Interactions with peers encourage positive practice of autonomy and independent decision-making skills,[6] as well as are essential for healthy sexual development including the development of the capacity for intimate friendships and learning appropriate sexual behavior.[7] Peer relationships are also very important for determining how much adolescents value school, how much effort they put into it, and how well they perform in class.[8][9] However, quite frequently adolescents take part in peer relationships that are harmful for their psychological development. Adolescents tend to form various cliques and belong to different crowds based on their activity interests, music and clothing preferences, as well as their cultural or ethnic background.[10] Such groups differ in their sociometric or popularity status, which often create unhealthy, aggression-victimization based dynamics between groups. Different forms of aggression can also be used to control dynamics and sociometric status within a group. Sometimes aggression is directed to an individual rather than to any apparent social group. Primary reasons for victimization include looks and speech; adolescents are also frequently bullied because of a disability, particular ethnicity, or religion.[11][12]

Definition[edit]Relational aggression is defined as a type of aggression that is “intended to harm other adolescents through deliberate manipulation of their social standing and relationships.” [13] Relational aggression, according to Dan Olweus [14] is a type of bullying. Bullying in general, is defined as physically or psychologically violent re-occurring and not provoked acts, where the bully and victim have unequal physical strength or/and psychological power.[15] These key conditions apply to all types of bullying: verbal, physical, relational.[14]

Forms[edit]The main three forms of relational aggression include:[13]

Excluding others from social activities;
Damaging victim’s reputations with others by spreading rumors and gossiping about the victim, or humiliating him/her in front of others;
Withdrawing attention and friendship.
Psychological manipulation and coercion can also be considered as a type of relational aggression.
Most recent research has been focusing on cyber-bullying, which is a relatively new yet increasingly popular way of engaging in both verbal and relational aggression due to growing importance of various communication and technology devices in modern societies.[16] Some studies show that internet meanness is more common among girls than boys.[12]

THe above was an academic explanation of my experience, now here is reality, while finishing morning report I witnessed relational aggression, While sitting and listening in on an all “chick” conversation, I felt like a voyer of sorts as it was a feeling of looking through a keyhole of a door while many of the girls in the room started to attack one of my associates going through a very difficult time in her life, two lovely children and going through a divorce, having been through a very tough one during my life, I have empathy and compassion, the girls proceeded to talk her hair, cloths, personality, shoes, even her hair bun… Really? considering most of them have extensions,…They have no right, I remember sitting there thinking, “there is enough Horse hair up in this place to make seventeen hundred fur coats for Joe Nameth to have at next years superbowl!!!!!!!!!!!! Damn.

Anyway,, these are simply observations, I want to say this, much like alcoholics have moments of clarity, I believe that not all women are like this, I have so many wonderful women friends that I would take a bullet for, but,,,, I can also think of a small minority of women whom make life so difficult for all genders…..Kim Kardashian,Rosie O’Donnell,Monica Lewinski, Hilary Clinton

Be careful out there…..

Standard