Impact of Work on Personal Relationships and Physician Well-being

IF 6.9 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Mayo Clinic proceedings Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.mayocp.2024.03.010
Mickey T. Trockel MD, PhD , Liselotte N. Dyrbye MD, MHPE, FACP , Colin P. West MD, PhD , Christine A. Sinsky MD , Hanhan Wang MPS , Lindsey E. Carlasare MBA , Michael Tutty PhD, MHA , Tait D. Shanafelt MD
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Abstract

Objective

To assess the impact of work on personal relationships (IWPR) by specialty and demographic variables in a national sample of physicians, to assess the association between the IWPR and burnout, and to determine the effect of adjusting for IWPR on the risk of burnout associated with being a physician.

Methods

Analysis was conducted of data from a representative sample of US physicians surveyed between November 20, 2020, and March 23, 2021, and from a probability-based sample of other US workers. IWPR and burnout were measured with published assessments.

Results

Of the 7360 physicians who responded to the survey, 6271 (85.2%) completed the IWPR assessment. In multivariable analysis, moderate or higher IWPR was associated with female sex (odds ratio [OR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.11 to 1.43), married vs single (OR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.71), and emergency medicine (OR, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.43 to 2.60) or physical and rehabilitative medicine (OR, 1.67; 95% CI, 1.12 to 2.50) vs internal medicine subspecialty. Physicians were more likely than workers in other fields (OR, 2.65; 95% CI, 2.33 to 3.02) to endorse the statement “In the past year, my job contributed to me feeling more isolated or detached from the people who are important to me” as at least moderately true. After adjustment for responses to this statement, work hours, and demographic characteristics, being a physician was not associated with the risk of burnout.

Conclusion

IWPR is associated with burnout. Adjustment for IWPR eliminated the observed difference in burnout between physicians and workers in other fields. Interventions that identify and mitigate work practices that have a negative impact on physicians’ personal relationships and interventions that support affected individual physicians are warranted.
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工作对人际关系和医生福祉的影响。
目的在全国医生样本中按专业和人口统计学变量评估工作对个人关系(IWPR)的影响,评估 IWPR 与职业倦怠之间的关联,并确定调整 IWPR 对与医生身份相关的职业倦怠风险的影响:对 2020 年 11 月 20 日至 2021 年 3 月 23 日期间调查的具有代表性的美国医生样本数据以及其他美国工人的概率样本数据进行了分析。IWPR和职业倦怠采用已公布的评估方法进行测量:在 7360 名回复调查的医生中,有 6271 人(85.2%)完成了 IWPR 评估。在多变量分析中,中度或更高的 IWPR 与女性性别(几率比 [OR],1.26;95% CI,1.11 至 1.43)、已婚与单身(OR,0.59;95% CI,0.48 至 0.71)、急诊医学(OR,1.93;95% CI,1.43 至 2.60)或物理和康复医学(OR,1.67;95% CI,1.12 至 2.50)与内科亚专业相关。对于 "在过去一年中,我的工作使我感到更加孤立或与对我很重要的人疏远 "这一说法,医生比其他领域的工作者更有可能(OR,2.65;95% CI,2.33 至 3.02)认为至少是中度正确的。在对该陈述的回答、工作时间和人口特征进行调整后,医生身份与职业倦怠风险无关:结论:IWPR 与职业倦怠有关。对 IWPR 的调整消除了观察到的医生与其他领域工作者在职业倦怠方面的差异。有必要采取干预措施,识别并减轻对医生个人关系产生负面影响的工作方式,并为受影响的医生个人提供支持。
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来源期刊
Mayo Clinic proceedings
Mayo Clinic proceedings 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
16.80
自引率
1.10%
发文量
383
审稿时长
37 days
期刊介绍: Mayo Clinic Proceedings is a premier peer-reviewed clinical journal in general medicine. Sponsored by Mayo Clinic, it is one of the most widely read and highly cited scientific publications for physicians. Since 1926, Mayo Clinic Proceedings has continuously published articles that focus on clinical medicine and support the professional and educational needs of its readers. The journal welcomes submissions from authors worldwide and includes Nobel-prize-winning research in its content. With an Impact Factor of 8.9, Mayo Clinic Proceedings is ranked #20 out of 167 journals in the Medicine, General and Internal category, placing it in the top 12% of these journals. It invites manuscripts on clinical and laboratory medicine, health care policy and economics, medical education and ethics, and related topics.
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