Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Leuven Institute for Healthcare Policy, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
BMJ Open. 2024 Feb 12;14(2):e079931. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-079931.
To determine the well-being of physicians and nurses in hospital practice in Europe, and to identify interventions that hold promise for reducing adverse clinician outcomes and improving patient safety.
Baseline cross-sectional survey of 2187 physicians and 6643 nurses practicing in 64 hospitals in six European countries participating in the EU-funded Magnet4Europe intervention to improve clinicians' well-being.
Acute general hospitals with 150 or more beds in six European countries: Belgium, England, Germany, Ireland, Sweden and Norway.
Physicians and nurses with direct patient contact working in adult medical and surgical inpatient units, including intensive care and emergency departments.
Burnout, job dissatisfaction, physical and mental health, intent to leave job, quality of care and patient safety and interventions clinicians believe would improve their well-being.
Poor work/life balance (57% physicians, 40% nurses), intent to leave (29% physicians, 33% nurses) and high burnout (25% physicians, 26% nurses) were prevalent. Rates varied by hospitals within countries and between countries. Better work environments and staffing were associated with lower percentages of clinicians reporting unfavourable health indicators, quality of care and patient safety. The effect of a 1 IQR improvement in work environments was associated with 7.2% fewer physicians and 5.3% fewer nurses reporting high burnout, and 14.2% fewer physicians and 8.6% fewer nurses giving their hospital an unfavourable rating of quality of care. Improving nurse staffing levels (79% nurses) and reducing bureaucracy and red tape (44% physicians) were interventions clinicians reported would be most effective in improving their own well-being, whereas individual mental health interventions were less frequently prioritised.
Burnout, mental health morbidities, job dissatisfaction and concerns about patient safety and care quality are prevalent among European hospital physicians and nurses. Interventions to improve hospital work environments and staffing are more important to clinicians than mental health interventions to improve personal resilience.
了解欧洲医院实践中医生和护士的健康状况,并确定有望减少不良临床医生结局和提高患者安全性的干预措施。
在参与欧盟资助的 Magnet4Europe 干预项目以改善临床医生福祉的六个欧洲国家的 64 家医院中,对 2187 名医生和 6643 名护士进行了基线横断面调查。
有 150 张或更多床位的急性综合医院,位于六个欧洲国家:比利时、英国、德国、爱尔兰、瑞典和挪威。
具有直接患者接触的医生和护士,在成人内科和外科住院病房工作,包括重症监护和急诊科。
倦怠、工作不满、身心健康、离职意向、护理质量和患者安全以及临床医生认为可以改善其健康状况的干预措施。
不良的工作/生活平衡(57%的医生,40%的护士)、离职意向(29%的医生,33%的护士)和高倦怠(25%的医生,26%的护士)普遍存在。这些比率因国家内的医院和国家之间的差异而有所不同。更好的工作环境和人员配备与报告不利健康指标、护理质量和患者安全的临床医生比例较低相关。工作环境改善一个 IQR 与报告高倦怠的医生减少 7.2%和护士减少 5.3%相关,报告护理质量不佳的医生减少 14.2%和护士减少 8.6%相关。改善护士人员配备水平(79%的护士)和减少官僚主义和繁文缛节(44%的医生)是临床医生报告最能改善其福祉的干预措施,而个人心理健康干预措施则较少被优先考虑。
倦怠、心理健康障碍、工作不满以及对患者安全和护理质量的担忧在欧洲医院的医生和护士中普遍存在。改善医院工作环境和人员配备的干预措施对临床医生比改善个人适应力的心理健康干预措施更为重要。