| Literature DB >> 27121279 |
Francis J Somville1,2, Véronique De Gucht3, Stan Maes3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency Physicians (EPs) are regularly confronted with work related traumatic events and hectic work conditions. Several studies mention a high incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and psychosomatic complaints in EP. The main objective of this study is to examine the contribution of demographics, traumatic events, life events, the occurrence of occupational hazards and social support to post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), psychological distress, fatigue, somatic complaints and job satisfaction in Emergency Physicians.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency physicians; Job satisfaction; Occupational hazards; Post-traumatic stress; Professional burnout; Social support
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27121279 PMCID: PMC4848801 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0249-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Nature of traumatic events in order of the percentage of respondents (N = 152) mentioning an event as the most distressing one
| Top 10 of traumatic events reported by Emergency Physicians |
| |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Dealing with sudden death of a young person | 40 (26) |
| 2. | Traumatic accident/disease involving a young person | 15 (10) |
| 3. | Dealing with severe injuries | 14 (9) |
| 4. | Dealing with death after resuscitation or resuscitation of a young person | 14 (9) |
| 5. | Missed diagnosis | 12 (8) |
| 6. | Dealing with suicide | 9 (6) |
| 7. | Dealing with death in general | 9 (6) |
| 8. | Inability to help chronically ill patients | 6 (4) |
| 9. | Dealing with aggression, violence and threat | 5 (3) |
| 10. | Lawsuits | 5 (3) |
Comparison of the outcome variables for the respondents of this study (N = 152) with normative data and the number (percentage) of respondents reaching the sub-clinical and clinical cutoffs for PTSD, anxiety, depression, somatic complaints and the clinical cutoff for perceived fatigue
| Outcome variable | Means (SD) | Sign. | Cutoff | Subclinical level | Cutoff | Clinical level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTSR (IES) |
|
| ||||
| Emergency Physicians | 10.98 (13.97) | ** | 20–25 | 30 (19.8 %) | ≥26 | 22 (14.5 %) |
| Normative sample | 8.10 (12.30) | |||||
| Anxiety (BSI) |
|
| ||||
| Emergency Physicians | 0.61 (0.72) | * | 0.42–1.37 | 68 (44.7 %) | ≥1.38 | 16 (10.5 %) |
| Normative sample | 0.33 (0.51) | |||||
| Depression (BSI) | N (%) | N (%) | ||||
| Emergency Physicians | 0.55 (0.71) | * | 0.36–1.73 | 64 (44.1.x %) | ≥1.74 | 12 (7.9 %) |
| Normative sample | 0.31 (0.53) | |||||
| Somatic complaints (PHQ 15) |
|
| ||||
| Emergency Physicians | 5.99 (4.69) | * | 5–9 | 82 (53.9 %) | ≥10 | 26 (17.1 %) |
| Normative sample | 3.80 (4.10) | |||||
| Perceived fatigue (CIS-20R) |
| |||||
| Emergency Physicians | 29.63 (16.73) | * | >35 | 52 (34.2 %) | ||
| Normative sample | 17.30 (10.10) |
Abbreviations: ** Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level.* at the 0.05 level, resp. = respondents
Bold values denote significant treatment differences
Inter-correlations (Pearson correlation coefficients) for age, seniority, the occurrence of physical hazards, violence, situations that can cause burnout, social support supervisor and social support colleagues and outcome variables
| α | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Age | - | - | |||||||||||
| 2. | Seniority | - |
| - | ||||||||||
| 3. | Occurrence Physical Hazards | - | -,11 | -,11 | - | |||||||||
| 4. | Occurrence Violence | - |
|
|
| - | ||||||||
| 5. | Occurrence Burnout | - | ,10 | ,11 |
|
| - | |||||||
| 6. | Supervisor support | .91 | -,09 | -,09 | -,01 | -,09 |
| - | ||||||
| 7. | Colleagues support | .87 | -,02 | -,01 | ,08 |
|
|
| - | |||||
| 8. | IES Total (PTSR) | .94 | ,06 | ,02 | ,07 |
|
|
|
| - | ||||
| 9. | Psychological distress (BSI) | .93 |
|
| ,14 |
|
|
|
|
| - | |||
| 10. | Somatization (PHQ 15) | .86 | -,11 | -,12 | ,09 |
|
| -,13 |
|
|
| - | ||
| 11. | Subjective Fatigue (CIS-20R) | .93 | -,09 | -,11 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| - | |
| 12. | Job satisfaction (LQWQ-MD) | .88 | ,00 | -,03 | -,01 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1 |
| M | 44,3 | 15,3 | 0,3 | 0,5 | 0.2 | 11.0 | 11.7 | 22.9 | 19.0 | 20.9 | 4.5 | 5.88 | ||
| D | 9,2 | 9,4 | 0,5 | 0,5 | 0.4 | 3.2 | 2.5 | 9.2 | 8,2 | 5.0 | 1.95 | 2.2 | ||
Abbreviations: α Cronbach’s Alpha, Correlation significant *p ≤ .05. ** p ≤ .01 level (2-tailed), LQWQ-MD Leiden Quality of Work Questionnaire for Emergency Physicians, IES impact of event scale, CIS-20R Checklist Individual Strength, PHQ 15 Somatization PHQ15 Checklist, PTSR Posttraumatic stress reaction, BSI Brief Symptom Inventory, the data in bold have significant correlation
Summary of hierarchical regression analysis: personal characteristics (block 1), exposure to traumatic events (block 2), occurrence (block 3) and social support (block 4) as predictors of post-traumatic stress distress, psychological distress, perceived fatigue, somatic complaints, job satisfaction
| IES total | Psychological distress | Perceived fatigue | Somatic complaints | Job Satisfaction | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Δ |
| Sign | Δ |
| Sign | Δ |
| Sign | Δ |
| Sign | ΔR2 | β | Sign | |
| Block 1: demographics | 0.00 | 0.04 | 0.03 | 0.03 | 0.01 | ||||||||||
| Age | ,05 | n.s |
| * | -,11 | n.s |
| * | -,02 | n.s | |||||
| Workschedule | ,02 | n.s | ,08 | n.s | ,13 | n.s | ,05 | n.s | -,11 | n.s | |||||
| Block 2: Traumatic events | 0.12 | 0.06 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.01 | ||||||||||
| Age | ,09 | n.s | -,14 | n.s | -,10 | n.s | -,15 | 0.07 | -,03 | n.s | |||||
| Workschedule | ,01 | n.s | ,07 | n.s | ,12 | n.s | ,04 | n.s | -,10 | n.s | |||||
| Traumatic events (work) |
|
|
| *** | ,14 | n.s | ,15 | 0.06 | ,01 | n.s | |||||
| Life events (personal life) | -,12 | n.s | -,05 | n.s | ,06 | n.s | -,02 | n.s | ,11 | n.s | |||||
| Block 3: occurrence | 0.15 | 0.23 | 0.28 | 0.23 | 0.28 | ||||||||||
| Age | ,02 | n.s |
| *** |
| ** |
| *** | ,07 | n.s | |||||
| Workschedule | ,03 | n.s | ,01 | n.s |
| * | ,07 | n.s |
| * | |||||
| Traumatic events (work) |
|
| ,14 | 0.06 | ,01 | n.s | ,04 | n.s | ,09 | n.s | |||||
| Life events (personal life) | -,12 | n.s | -,05 | n.s | ,05 | n.s | -,02 | n.s | ,11 | n.s | |||||
| Occurrence physical total | -,07 | n.s | -,03 | n.s | ,05 | n.s | -,10 | n.s |
| * | |||||
| Occurrence violence |
|
|
| * |
| *** |
| * |
| * | |||||
| Occurrence situations that can cause burnout |
|
|
| *** |
| *** |
| *** |
| *** | |||||
| Block 4: social support | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.03 | 0.07 | 0.16 | ||||||||||
| Age | ,03 | n.s |
| *** |
| * |
| *** | ,06 | n.s | |||||
| Workschedule | ,02 | n.s | ,09 | n.s |
| * | ,06 | n.s | -,11 | 0.09 | |||||
| Traumatic events (work) |
|
|
| * | ,01 | n.s | ,05 | n.s | ,06 | n.s | |||||
| Life events (personal life) | -,12 | n.s | -,05 | n.s | ,04 | n.s | -,03 | n.s | ,11 | n.s | |||||
| Occurrence physical total | -,04 | n.s | -,00 | n.s | ,10 | n.s | -,03 | n.s | ,08 | n.s | |||||
| Occurrence violence | ,15 | 0.07 |
| * |
| *** |
| * | -,11 | 0.09 | |||||
| Occurrence situations that can cause burnout |
|
|
| *** |
| *** |
| *** |
| *** | |||||
| Social support supervisor | ,01 | n.s | ,03 | n.s | ,13 | n.s |
| ** | ,14 | n.s | |||||
| Social support colleagues | -,17 | 0.07 | -,17 | 0.07 |
| ** |
| *** |
| *** | |||||
|
| 0.29 |
| 0.35 |
| 0.36 |
| 0.35 |
| 0.46 | ||||||
| Adj | 0.25 | Adj | 0.31 | Adj | 0.33 | Adj | 0.31 | Adj | 0.43 | ||||||
Abbreviations: ΔR change in R2 values from one model to another, R model R2 values in one model, Adj R model adjusted R2 values in one model, β beta resulting standardized regression coefficients, Sign significant, n.s not significant, * Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level, ** Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level,*** Correlation is significant at the 0.001 level, IES total = post-traumatic stress distress, the bold data are significant