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Background: Critical care practitioners have some of the highest levels of burnout in health care.
Research Question: What are key drivers of burnout across the multidisciplinary ICU team?
Study Design And Methods: We conducted a multicenter mixed-methods cohort study in ICUs at three diverse hospitals. We recruited physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and other staff members who worked primarily in an ICU. Participants completed the Maslach Burnout Inventory for Human Services Survey for Medical Personnel (MBI) and a qualitative focus group or interview using a phenomenologic approach. MBI subscales for emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and lack of personal accomplishment were calculated. Emergent shared themes contributing to burnout were identified from qualitative interviews.
Results: Fifty-eight providers (26 physicians, 22 nurses, six respiratory therapists, three pharmacists, and one case manager) participated. Ten participants (17.9%) described their burnout as moderate to high. However, participants scored moderate or high levels across the three MBI subscales (emotional exhaustion, 71.4%; depersonalization, 53.6%; and lack of personal achievement, 53.6%). Drivers of burnout aligned with three core themes: patient factors, team dynamics, and hospital culture. Individual drivers included medically futile cases, difficult families, contagiousness of burnout, lack of respect between team members, the increasing burden of administrative or regulatory requirements at the cost of time with patients, lack of recognition from hospital leadership, and technology. All were highly interconnected across the three larger domains. Despite differences in MBI scores, most provider types described very similar drivers of burnout.
Interpretation: High levels of burnout were identified through the MBI, but participants did not self-report high levels of burnout, suggesting a lack of awareness. Drivers of burnout were highly interconnected, but factors related to team dynamics and hospital culture were most prominent and shared across provider types. The shared drivers of burnout across multiple provider types highlights the need for interventions focused on team- and system-level drivers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.11.034 | DOI Listing |
Pediatrics
September 2025
Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Background/objectives: Listening is essential for communication and is a key driver of patient safety. We aimed to gain a rich understanding of how hospitalized patients and families feel unheard to develop actionable interventions.
Methods: This mixed-methods study examined data from family safety interviews administered to hospitalized patients and families on pediatric inpatient units of 8 US hospitals.
Acad Med
September 2025
T. Shanafelt is the Jeanie and Stewart Ritchie Professor of Medicine, chief wellness officer, and associate dean, Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California.
Clinician well-being is increasingly recognized as a fundamental organizational concern, with occupational burnout and disengagement reflecting issues in the practice environment rather than individual shortcomings. Unfortunately, suboptimal work conditions are pervasive in health care, and a growing body of evidence points to their impact not only on clinician well-being and turnover, but also on patient safety, care quality, and workforce sustainability. In this issue of Academic Medicine, Qeadan and colleagues provide compelling evidence that characteristics of departmental climate are closely linked to faculty turnover, adding to a robust body of evidence demonstrating the link between occupational well-being and turnover.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJB JS Open Access
August 2025
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
Background: Burnout is prevalent among orthopaedic surgeons, but the intrinsic factors that predispose surgeons to it are unknown. Recent studies have demonstrated that personality traits correlate with the risk of burnout, but orthopaedic-specific data are lacking. This study examined the relationship between the "Big Five" personality traits and burnout among orthopaedic residents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med
August 2025
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Faculty, Leipzig University, Semmelweisstr. 10, Leipzig, 04103, Germany.
Background: People reporting long COVID (LC) or post-COVID-19 vaccination syndrome (PCVS) not only suffer from their symptoms but also from stigmatization. Despite ample account and characterization of stigma experiences so far, its mechanisms and consequences on health outcomes, and particularly the role of "psychologization" remain unclear.
Methods: In a cross-sectional observational study, we examined a large convenience sample of adults who report having LC or PCVS.
JMA J
July 2025
Department of Public Health, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Ensuring good sleep quality and adequate sleep duration is crucial for health. Sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) impairs sleep quality and increases the risk of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and accidents. The author has significantly advanced the understanding of SAS in Japan through over 20 years of epidemiological studies.
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