Linzer Mark, Manwell Linda Baier, Williams Eric S, Bobula James A, Brown Roger L, Varkey Anita B, Man Bernice, McMurray Julia E, Maguire Ann, Horner-Ibler Barbara, Schwartz Mark D
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, and Medical College of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53705, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2009 Jul 7;151(1):28-36, W6-9. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-151-1-200907070-00006.
Adverse primary care work conditions could lead to a reduction in the primary care workforce and lower-quality patient care.
To assess the relationship among adverse primary care work conditions, adverse physician reactions (stress, burnout, and intent to leave), and patient care.
Cross-sectional analysis.
119 ambulatory clinics in New York, New York, and in the upper Midwest.
422 family practitioners and general internists and 1795 of their adult patients with diabetes, hypertension, or heart failure.
Physician perception of clinic workflow (time pressure and pace), work control, and organizational culture (assessed survey); physician satisfaction, stress, burnout, and intent to leave practice (assessed by survey); and health care quality and errors (assessed by chart audits).
More than one half of the physicians (53.1%) reported time pressure during office visits, 48.1% said their work pace was chaotic, 78.4% noted low control over their work, and 26.5% reported burnout. Adverse workflow (time pressure and chaotic environments), low work control, and unfavorable organizational culture were strongly associated with low physician satisfaction, high stress, burnout, and intent to leave. Some work conditions were associated with lower quality and more errors, but findings were inconsistent across work conditions and diagnoses. No association was found between adverse physician reactions, such as stress and burnout, and care quality or errors.
The analyses were cross-sectional, the measures were self-reported, and the sample contained an average of 4 patients per physician.
Adverse work conditions are associated with adverse physician reactions, but no consistent associations were found between adverse work conditions and the quality of patient care, and no associations were seen between adverse physician reactions and the quality of patient care.
基层医疗工作条件不佳可能导致基层医疗劳动力减少以及患者护理质量下降。
评估基层医疗工作条件不佳、医生的不良反应(压力、职业倦怠和离职意愿)与患者护理之间的关系。
横断面分析。
纽约市以及中西部上游地区的119家门诊诊所。
422名家庭医生和普通内科医生及其1795名患有糖尿病、高血压或心力衰竭的成年患者。
医生对诊所工作流程(时间压力和节奏)、工作控制权和组织文化的感知(通过调查评估);医生的满意度、压力、职业倦怠和离职意愿(通过调查评估);以及医疗质量和差错(通过病历审核评估)。
超过一半的医生(53.1%)报告在门诊期间存在时间压力,48.1%表示他们的工作节奏混乱,78.4%指出对工作的控制权较低,26.5%报告有职业倦怠。不良的工作流程(时间压力和混乱的环境)、低工作控制权和不良的组织文化与医生的低满意度、高压力、职业倦怠和离职意愿密切相关。一些工作条件与较低的质量和更多的差错相关,但不同工作条件和诊断的结果并不一致。未发现医生的不良反应(如压力和职业倦怠)与护理质量或差错之间存在关联。
分析为横断面研究,测量指标为自我报告,且样本中每位医生平均有4名患者。
不良工作条件与医生的不良反应相关,但未发现不良工作条件与患者护理质量之间存在一致的关联,也未发现医生的不良反应与患者护理质量之间存在关联。