Section of Hematology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Milken Institute School of Public Health, The George Washington University, Washington, DC.
Blood Adv. 2023 Jul 11;7(13):3058-3068. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021006140.
Burnout is prevalent throughout medicine. Few large-scale studies have examined the impact of physician compensation or clinical support staff on burnout among hematologists and oncologists. In 2019, the American Society of Hematology conducted a practice survey of hematologists and oncologists in the AMA (American Medical Association) Masterfile; burnout was measured using a validated, single-item burnout instrument from the Physician Work-Life Study, while satisfaction was assessed in several domains using a 5-point Likert scale. The overall survey response rate was 25.2% (n = 631). Of 411 respondents with complete responses in the final analysis, 36.7% (n = 151) were from academic practices and 63.3% (n = 260) from community practices; 29.0% (n = 119) were female. Over one-third (36.5%; n = 150) reported burnout, while 12.0% (n = 50) had a high level of burnout. In weighted multivariate logistic regression models incorporating numerous variables, compensation plans based entirely on relative value unit (RVU) generation were significantly associated with high burnout among academic and community physicians, while the combination of RVU + salary compensation showed no significant association. Female gender was associated with high burnout among academic physicians. High advanced practice provider utilization was inversely associated with high burnout among community physicians. Distinct patterns of career dissatisfaction were observed between academic and community physicians. We propose that the implementation of compensation models not based entirely on clinical productivity increased support for women in academic medicine, and expansion of advanced practice provider support in community practices may address burnout among hematologists and oncologists.
burnout 在医学领域普遍存在。很少有大规模的研究考察医生薪酬或临床支持人员对血液学家和肿瘤学家 burnout 的影响。2019 年,美国血液学会(American Society of Hematology)对 AMA(美国医学协会)Masterfile 中的血液学家和肿瘤学家进行了实践调查;使用 Physician Work-Life Study 的经过验证的单一 burnout 工具衡量 burnout,同时使用 5 点 Likert 量表评估几个领域的满意度。总体调查回复率为 25.2%(n=631)。在最终分析中,有 411 名有完整回复的受访者中,36.7%(n=151)来自学术实践,63.3%(n=260)来自社区实践;29.0%(n=119)为女性。超过三分之一(36.5%;n=150)报告有 burnout,而 12.0%(n=50)有高度 burnout。在纳入众多变量的加权多变量逻辑回归模型中,完全基于相对价值单位(RVU)生成的薪酬计划与学术和社区医生的高度 burnout 显著相关,而 RVU+工资补偿的组合则没有显著关联。女性性别与学术医生的高度 burnout 相关。高的高级实践提供者利用率与社区医生的高度 burnout 呈负相关。在学术医生和社区医生之间观察到不同的职业不满模式。我们建议实施不完全基于临床生产力的薪酬模式,以增加对学术医学中女性的支持,并扩大社区实践中高级实践提供者的支持,以解决血液学家和肿瘤学家的 burnout 问题。