Sochacki Kyle R, Dong David, Peterson Leif, McCulloch Patrick C, Harris Joshua D
Houston Methodist Orthopedic and Sports Medicine, 6445 Main Street, Suite 2500, Houston, Texas 77030.
Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil. 2019 Nov 13;1(2):e115-e121. doi: 10.1016/j.asmr.2019.09.004. eCollection 2019 Dec.
The purpose of this study was (1) to determine the prevalence of burnout in orthopaedic surgeons and (2) to determine whether there is an association or correlation between subject-specific variables (age, attending physician, resident, postgraduate year level, gender, number of calls, total hours worked, and total hours of sleep) and burnout.
Surgeons were prospectively enrolled and provided with a validated wearable device. Subject-specific variables were recorded. Participants completed the Maslach Burnout Inventory and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS-29) weekly. Burnout and burnout risk were defined. Multivariate analysis and bivariate correlations were used to determine the association and correlation between subject-specific variables and burnout. Residents were compared to attending surgeons.
Of the 26 enrolled subjects, 21 (15 males, 6 females; mean age 37.2 ± 10.9) completed the 4-week study. Residents worked significantly more hours per week than attending surgeons (68.5 ± 15.2 versus 49.9 ± 7.5, = 0.009). Of the orthopaedic surgeons, 6 (28.6%) experienced burnout, and 7 (33.3%) orthopaedic surgeons were at risk for burnout. There was no significant difference in burnout rates between residents and attending surgeons ( > 0.05). The number of overnight calls was significantly correlated with increased burnout (r = 0.435, = 0.049). Female gender was significantly associated ( = 0.041) and correlated (r = 0.558, = 0.009) with burnout. There was no significant association with burnout between the number of hours worked and hours of sleep.
The rate of burnout was less than 50% among orthopaedic surgeons. The number of overnight calls and female gender are significantly correlated with increased burnout. There was no significant correlation between hours worked and hours of sleep in surgeon burnout.
Burnout is an increasingly common problem among orthopaedic surgeons, and it can have significant negative effects on surgeons' health and patients' outcomes. Identifying the predictors of burnout would allow surgeons to address these risk factors and reduce burnout.
本研究的目的是(1)确定骨科医生职业倦怠的患病率,以及(2)确定个体特定变量(年龄、主治医生、住院医生、研究生年级、性别、值班次数、总工作时长和总睡眠时间)与职业倦怠之间是否存在关联或相关性。
前瞻性招募外科医生,并为其提供经过验证的可穿戴设备。记录个体特定变量。参与者每周完成马氏职业倦怠量表和患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS-29)。定义职业倦怠和职业倦怠风险。采用多变量分析和双变量相关性分析来确定个体特定变量与职业倦怠之间的关联和相关性。将住院医生与主治医生进行比较。
在26名登记受试者中,21名(15名男性,6名女性;平均年龄37.2±10.9岁)完成了为期4周的研究。住院医生每周工作的小时数显著多于主治医生(68.5±15.2对49.9±7.5,P = 0.009)。在骨科医生中,6名(28.6%)经历了职业倦怠,7名(33.3%)骨科医生有职业倦怠风险。住院医生和主治医生的职业倦怠率没有显著差异(P>0.05)。夜间值班次数与职业倦怠增加显著相关(r = 0.435,P = 0.049)。女性性别与职业倦怠显著相关(P = 0.041)且具有相关性(r = 0.558,P = 0.009)。工作时长和睡眠时间与职业倦怠之间没有显著关联。
骨科医生中职业倦怠率低于50%。夜间值班次数和女性性别与职业倦怠增加显著相关。外科医生职业倦怠中工作时长和睡眠时间之间没有显著相关性。
职业倦怠在骨科医生中是一个日益常见的问题,并且它可能对外科医生的健康和患者的结局产生重大负面影响。识别职业倦怠的预测因素将使外科医生能够应对这些风险因素并减少职业倦怠。