University of California San Diego, Department of Psychiatry, La Jolla, CA, United States of America.
University of California San Diego, Department of Psychiatry, La Jolla, CA, United States of America.
J Affect Disord. 2022 Sep 1;312:259-267. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.06.047. Epub 2022 Jun 24.
Burnout is a "normal" albeit concerning response to workplace stress, whereas Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is a serious illness associated with impairment and suicide risk. Because of symptomatic overlap between the two conditions and MDD-associated stigma, individuals reporting work-related stress and depression often are "diagnosed" with burnout at the expense of recognizing and treating MDD. Our study aimed to leverage organizational implementation of the American Foundation of Suicide Prevention's Interactive Screening Program to elucidate relationships among burnout, depression, and other suicide risk factors.
2281 of about 30,000 (~7.6 %) medical trainees, staff, and faculty responded to an anonymous online stress and depression questionnaire. Respondents were grouped into four cohorts: screened positive for burnout alone (n = 439, 19 %), depression alone (n = 268, 12 %), both conditions (n = 759, 33 %), or neither condition (n = 817, 36 %), and compared on multiple measures of distress and other suicide risk factors.
Burnout alone and depression alone each predicted greater distress and suicide risk compared with neither condition. Depression was a stronger predictor than burnout and demonstrated a consistent association with other suicide risk factors regardless of whether burnout was present. In contrast, burnout was not consistently associated with other suicide risk factors when depression was present.
The sample was limited to one state-supported academic medical center; to individuals who elected to take the online survey; and relied on a single item, non-validated measure of burnout.
When emotional distress is reported by healthcare workers, attention should not stop at "burnout," as burnout frequently comingles with clinical depression, a serious and treatable mental health condition.
倦怠是对工作场所压力的“正常”反应,尽管令人担忧,但重度抑郁症(MDD)是一种与功能障碍和自杀风险相关的严重疾病。由于两种病症存在症状重叠,且 MDD 相关的污名化,报告与工作相关的压力和抑郁的个体经常被“诊断”为倦怠,而不是识别和治疗 MDD。我们的研究旨在利用美国自杀预防基金会的互动筛查计划在组织中的实施,阐明倦怠、抑郁和其他自杀风险因素之间的关系。
大约 30000 名医学学员、工作人员和教员中的 2281 人(约 7.6%)对一份匿名的在线压力和抑郁问卷做出了回应。受访者分为四组:仅筛查出倦怠(n=439,19%)、仅筛查出抑郁(n=268,12%)、同时存在两种病症(n=759,33%)或两种病症都没有(n=817,36%),并对多种困扰和其他自杀风险因素进行了比较。
仅倦怠和仅抑郁都比没有两种病症的情况下预测出更大的困扰和自杀风险。抑郁是比倦怠更强的预测因素,并且无论是否存在倦怠,都与其他自杀风险因素存在一致的关联。相比之下,当存在抑郁时,倦怠与其他自杀风险因素之间并不始终存在关联。
该样本仅限于一个由州政府支持的学术医疗中心;仅包括选择参加在线调查的个体;并且依赖于倦怠的单一项目、未经验证的测量方法。
当医护人员报告情绪困扰时,不应仅仅关注“倦怠”,因为倦怠经常与临床抑郁症相混淆,后者是一种严重且可治疗的心理健康状况。