| Literature DB >> 26600126 |
Massimiliano Orri1,2,3, Anne Revah-Lévy4,5,6, Olivier Farges3,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physicians' emotions affect both patient care and personal well-being. Surgeons appear at particularly high risk, as evidenced by the high rate of burnout and the alarming consequences in both their personal lives and professional behavior. The aim of this qualitative study is to explore the emotional experiences of surgeons and their impact on their surgical practice. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26600126 PMCID: PMC4657990 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Description of the main themes and subthemes.
| Chronological description | Descriptive themes | Main elements (subthemes) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emotions Before Surgery | Preoperative Consultation as a Source of Emotion | Emotions | Responsibility of decision making |
| Uncertainty surrounding this decision | |||
| Taking a risk | |||
| Causes | Subjectivity of clinical decisions | ||
| Personal decisions prevail over team decisions | |||
| Coping | Working in a team (but team decision not always applied) | ||
| Shaping information and establishing an implicit contract | |||
| Dealing with patients’ emotion | |||
| Awaiting Surgery: Surgeons’ Anticipation of Difficulty | Emotions | Anxiety and fear | |
| Causes | Ubiquitous presence of the possibility of complication | ||
| Coping | Mastering preoperative anxiety | ||
| Emotions During Surgery | Attempting to master their emotions through distancing and focusing on surgery as a technical activity | Emotions | Pleasure of operating, in a pleasant atmosphere |
| Emotional identification with the patient | |||
| Causes | Surgery as an aggressive act | ||
| Operating on an individual human being | |||
| Coping | Finding a balance between emotional involvement and neutralityThinking of surgery as a technical activity | ||
| Occurrence of a complication | Emotions | Distress caused by the occurrence of a complication | |
| Anxiety due to losing a clear state of mind | |||
| Causes | Occurrence of an intraoperative complicationFeeling responsible for this complication | ||
| Coping | Cognitive re-centeringMinimizing evidence | ||
| Distress caused by problems of time management and fatigue | Emotions | Pressure to be recognized as a good surgeon by the others | |
| Discomfort because of time pressure and fatigue | |||
| Causes | No clear separation between work life and private life | ||
| Perceived role expectations | |||
| Coping | Acceptance of fatigue and satisfying the ideal surgeon image | ||
| Further increase their work load and multitask | |||
| Emotions After Surgery | Repercussion of a complication | Emotions | Long-term burden of a complication |
| Feeling of personal guilt and accountability | |||
| Causes | Osmotic link between surgeon and patient | ||
| Strengthened emotional link when complication occurs | |||
| Pressures of the surgical ideal | Failure of case/facts to accord with the ideal position that of “surgery is the only chance for cure” | ||
| Lack of a culture of non-accusatory error management | |||
| Coping | “Image” of the surgeon; playing a roleMorbidity and Mortality meetings but their rationale (blame-free) not applied | ||