Division of Community Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Mayo Clin Proc. 2021 Aug;96(8):2168-2183. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.12.036. Epub 2021 Jul 2.
To explore the relationship between learning environment culture and the subsequent risk of developing burnout in a national sample of residents overall and by gender.
From April 7 to August 2, 2016, and May 26 to August 5, 2017, we surveyed residents in their second (R2) and third (R3) postgraduate year. The survey included a negative interpersonal experiences scale (score range 1 to 7 points, higher being worse) assessing psychological safety and bias, inclusion, respect, and justice; an unfair treatment scale (score range 1 to 5 points, higher being worse), and two items from the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Individual responses to the R2 and R3 surveys were linked.
The R2 survey was completed by 3588 of 4696 (76.4%) residents; 3058 of 3726 (82.1%) residents completed the R3 survey; and 2888 residents completed both surveys. Women reported more negative interpersonal experiences (mean [SD], 3.00 [0.83] vs 2.90 [0.85], P<.001) and unfair treatment (66.5% vs. 58.7%, P<.001) than men at R2. On multivariable analysis, women at R3 were more likely than their male counterparts to have burnout (odds ratio, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.48; P=.03). Both men and women who reported more negative interpersonal experiences at R2 were more likely to have burnout at R3 (odds ratio, 1.32; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.52; P<.001). The factors contributing to burnout did not vary in effect magnitude by gender.
These findings indicate women residents are more likely to have burnout relative to men in the third year of residency. Negative culture predicted subsequent burnout 1 year later among both men and women. Differences in burnout were at least partly due to differing levels of exposure to negative interactions for men versus women rather than a negative interaction having a differential impact on the well-being of men versus women.
在全国范围内的住院医师样本中,通过整体和性别两个方面,探究学习环境文化与随后 burnout 风险之间的关系。
2016 年 4 月 7 日至 8 月 2 日和 2017 年 5 月 26 日至 8 月 5 日,我们对第二年(R2)和第三年(R3)的住院医师进行了调查。该调查包括一个负面人际经历量表(评分范围 1 到 7 分,分数越高越差),用于评估心理安全感和偏见、包容、尊重和公正;一个不公平待遇量表(评分范围 1 到 5 分,分数越高越差),以及来自 Maslach 职业倦怠量表的两个项目。对 R2 和 R3 调查的个人回复进行了链接。
3588 名住院医师(4696 名的 76.4%)完成了 R2 调查;3058 名住院医师(3726 名的 82.1%)完成了 R3 调查;2888 名住院医师完成了这两项调查。女性在 R2 时报告了更多的负面人际经历(平均[标准差],3.00 [0.83] 比 2.90 [0.85],P<.001)和不公平待遇(66.5% 比 58.7%,P<.001)。在多变量分析中,R3 时女性比男性更有可能出现倦怠(优势比,1.23;95%置信区间,1.02 至 1.48;P=.03)。在 R2 时报告更多负面人际经历的男性和女性在 R3 时更有可能出现倦怠(优势比,1.32;95%置信区间,1.14 至 1.52;P<.001)。导致倦怠的因素在男性和女性中的影响程度没有差异。
这些发现表明,与男性相比,女性住院医师在住院医师第三年更有可能出现倦怠。第二年的文化消极性预测了一年后出现倦怠的情况,无论男性还是女性都是如此。倦怠的差异至少部分归因于男性与女性接触到的负面互动程度不同,而不是消极互动对男性与女性的幸福感产生不同的影响。