Salmoirago-Blotcher Elena, Fitchett George, Leung Katherine, Volturo Gregory, Boudreaux Edwin, Crawford Sybil, Ockene Ira, Curlin Farr
Department of Medicine, Warren Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University & Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine, The Miriam Hospital, Providence, RI, United States.
Department of Religion, Health and Human Values, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United States.
Prev Med Rep. 2016 Feb 1;3:189-95. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2016.01.009. eCollection 2016 Jun.
Burnout is highly prevalent among Emergency Medicine (EM) physicians and has significant impact on quality of care and workforce retention. The objective of this study was to determine whether higher religion/spirituality (R/S) is associated with a lower prevalence of burnout among EM physicians (primary outcome). A history of malpractice lawsuits and maladaptive behaviors were the secondary outcomes.
This was a cross-sectional, survey-based study conducted among a random sample of physicians from the Massachusetts College of Emergency Physicians mailing list. Burnout was measured using a validated 2-item version of the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Maladaptive behaviors (smoking, drinking, and substance use) and medical malpractice were self-reported. R/S measures included organized religiosity, religious affiliation, private R/S practice, self-rated spirituality, religious rest, and religious commitment. Logistic regression was used to model study outcomes as a function of R/S predictors.
Of 422 EM physicians who received the invitation to participate, 138 completed the survey (32.7%). The prevalence of burnout was 27%. No significant associations were observed between burnout and R/S indicators. Maladaptive behaviors (adjusted OR = 0.42, CI: 0.19 to 0.96; p = 0.039) and history of medical malpractice (adjusted OR = 0.32; CI: 0.11 to 0.93; p = 0.037) were less likely among physicians reporting to be more involved in organized religious activity and to observe a day of rest for religious reasons, respectively.
This study provides preliminary evidence for a possible protective association of certain dimensions of R/S on maladaptive behaviors and medical malpractice among EM physicians.
职业倦怠在急诊医学(EM)医生中非常普遍,对医疗质量和劳动力留存率有重大影响。本研究的目的是确定较高的宗教信仰/精神性(R/S)是否与急诊医学医生中较低的职业倦怠患病率相关(主要结果)。医疗事故诉讼史和适应不良行为是次要结果。
这是一项基于调查的横断面研究,对马萨诸塞州急诊医师学院邮件列表中的医生随机样本进行。使用经过验证的2项版马氏职业倦怠量表来测量职业倦怠。适应不良行为(吸烟、饮酒和药物使用)和医疗事故由自我报告。R/S测量包括有组织的宗教信仰、宗教归属、个人R/S实践、自我评定的精神性、宗教休息和宗教承诺。使用逻辑回归将研究结果建模为R/S预测因素的函数。
在收到参与邀请的422名急诊医学医生中,138人完成了调查(32.7%)。职业倦怠的患病率为27%。未观察到职业倦怠与R/S指标之间存在显著关联。在报告更多参与有组织宗教活动的医生中,适应不良行为(调整后的OR = 0.42,CI:0.19至0.96;p = 0.039)的可能性较小,在因宗教原因进行一天休息的医生中,医疗事故诉讼史(调整后的OR = 0.32;CI:0.11至0.93;p = 0.037)的可能性较小。
本研究为R/S的某些维度对急诊医学医生的适应不良行为和医疗事故可能存在保护关联提供了初步证据。