This article (http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/features/article/nearly-half-of-us-doctors-struggle-with-burnout-says-study/) is again a reminder of the stress level that a doctor have to go through. The more developed a country becomes, the more stress a doctor has to deal with. This is simply because of the fact that the population is more educated, demanding, do not respect the doctor as much as the older generations, high litigation rate and reducing income with higher debt.
The good old days are gone. I know many budding doctors gets excited watching TV programmes like House and Grey’s anatomy but trust me, those are just dramas made for profit! Try doing what House does to his patients and I can bet you that you will have hundreds of lawyers letter at your post box!!
I use to tell people that a doctor who really cares for a patient will almost always get stressed out. On the other hand, those who do not care will always have less stress as they don’t bother what happens to the patient the moment he leaves his/her room. It may not be true all the time but it is, most of the time.
Nearly half of US doctors struggle with burnout, says study
NEW YORK, Aug 21 — Job burnout strikes doctors more often than it does other employed people in the United States, according to a national survey that included more than 7,000 doctors.More than four in 10 US physicians said they were emotionally exhausted or felt a high degree of cynicism, or “depersonalisation,” toward their patients, said researchers whose findings appeared in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
“The high rate of burnout has consequences not only for the individual physicians, but also for the patients they are caring for,” said Tait Shanafelt of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who led the research.
Previous studies have shown that burned-out doctors are more prone to thinking about suicide and to making medical errors than their peers, Shanafelt added.
The survey included nearly 7,300 doctors who filled in questionnaires about their work-life balance in 2011.
Thirty-eight per cent had high emotional exhaustion scores, which is akin to losing enthusiasm for their job, according to Shanafelt. Thirty per cent had high depersonalization scores, which translates into viewing patients more like objects than human beings, and 46 per cent had at least one of the two symptoms.
Burnout was most common among doctors at the “frontline of care,” such as those working in emergency rooms or in family medicine. Dermatologists and preventive care specialists were less affected.
The researchers compared physicians with a random sample of 3,400 employed people who were not doctors. Based on a modified version of the original questionnaire, 38 per cent of the doctors had burnout symptoms against 28 per cent of the rest.
“The study advances our knowledge by, for the first time, comparing to the general population and showing that physicians are at higher risk of burnout,” said James Wright, chief surgeon at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.
“It’s very clear that when physicians are becoming burned-out it begins to affect their relationships with other healthcare workers and with patient families.”
The new results come with some uncertainty, because only about a quarter of the doctors who received an invitation to participate completed the survey.
It’s not clear why burnout strikes so many doctors, Shanafelt said, noting that excessive workloads are only part of the equation. Other possible reasons include too much paperwork, loss of professional autonomy and a higher patient load to make up for declining reimbursement rates.
“There is a sense that the volume of patients that need to be seen is increasing and it’s taking away some of the time needed to build a relationship and give the best care possible,” Shanafelt said. “That starts to build cynicism, I think.”— Reuters
Stress and burnout is hitting the roof these days…. the only consolation is the “making money” part… thus driving unethical practices skyhigh
Unfortunately in US you will get sued!
‘Bad’ news : Heard that KK is starting shift system soon. Will be starting in KK Port Dickson. We are a step forward to the jobless complication now.
burnt out is pretty normal during postgrad ttraining wherever u trained
once finishing it,the life of attending will be easy and definitely with a spike of income.
one advantage of US system is that once got into a training spot,one is pretty secured to graduate with specialty one has choosen.the passing rate
of being board certified with first try is very high compared to those british royal college.
The life is easy part and spike of income IS NOT TRUE. I can assure you.
The stress level actually increases further as your responsibility and litigation rate goes UP.