| Literature DB >> 30055571 |
Karen Busk Nørøxe1, Anette Fischer Pedersen2, Flemming Bro3, Peter Vedsted3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor mental well-being and low job satisfaction among physicians can have significant negative implications for the physicians and their patients and may also reduce the cost efficiency in health care. Mental distress is increasingly common in physicians, including general practitioners (GPs). This study aimed to examine mental well-being and job satisfaction among Danish GPs and potential associations with age, gender and practice organisation.Entities:
Keywords: Burnout; Denmark; General practitioner; Job satisfaction; Mental health; Primary care; Work-life balance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30055571 PMCID: PMC6064618 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-018-0809-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1Flowchart of GPs included in the study
Fig. 2Percentage of GPs reporting high emotional exhaustion (EE), high depersonalisation (DP) and low personal accomplishment (PA). (N = 1697 GPs who responded to all MBI-HSS subscales)
Characteristics of eligible GPs and survey respondents
| Eligible GPs | Respondents | Response rate | Risk difference, adjusteda | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | N (%) | % (95% CI) | PPb (95% CI) | ||
| Total | 3350 (100) | 1697 (100) | 50.7 (48.9–52.4) | ||
| Gender | Female | 1670 (49.9) | 941 (55.5) | 56.3 (53.9–58.7) | ref. |
| Male | 1680 (50.1) | 756 (44.5) | 45.0 (42.6–47.4) |
| |
| Age (years) | ≤ 45 | 934 (27.9) | 501 (29.5) | 53.6 (50.4–56.9) | ref. |
| 46–59 | 1404 (41.9) | 771 (45.4) | 54.9 (52.2–57.5) | 1.7 (-2.4–5.9) | |
| ≥ 60 | 1012 (30.2) | 425 (25.0) | 42.0 (38.9–45.1) |
| |
| GPs per practice | 1 | 965 (28.8) | 439 (25.9) | 45.5 (42.3–48.7) | ref. |
| 2–3 | 1515 (45.2) | 786 (46.3) | 51.9 (49.4–54.5) | 1.3 (-3.0–5.6) | |
| > 3 | 871 (26.0) | 472 (27.8) | 54.2 (50.8–57.5) | 2.4 (-2.6–7.3) | |
| Listed patients per GP (number): | |||||
| All patients | < 1400 | 841 (25.1) | 442 (26.1) | 52.6 (49.1–56.0) | ref. |
| 1400–1589 | 836 (25.0) | 456 (26.9) | 54.5 (51.1–58.0) | 2.1 (-2.7–6.8) | |
| 1590–1779 | 836 (25.0) | 416 (24.5) | 49.8 (46.3–53.2) | − 2.4 (-7.2–2.4) | |
| > 1779 | 837 (25.0) | 383 (22.6) | 45.8 (42.3–49.2) |
| |
| Patients with CCI score of ≥1 | < 224 | 846 (25.3) | 471 (27.8) | 55.7 (52.3–59.1) | ref. |
| 224–263 | 837 (25.0) | 446 (26.3) | 53.3 (49.8–56.7) | -2.9 (-7.9–2.0) | |
| 264–311 | 836 (25.0) | 416 (24.5) | 49.8 (46.3–53.2) |
| |
| > 311 | 831 (24.8) | 364 (21.5) | 43.8 (40.4–47.3) |
| |
| Patients aged ≥70 years | < 152 | 839 (25.0) | 468 (27.6) | 55.8 (52.3–59.2) | ref. |
| 152–200 | 840 (25.1) | 433 (25.5) | 51.5 (48.1–55.0) |
| |
| 201–250 | 839 (25.0) | 426 (25.1) | 50.8 (47.3–54.2) |
| |
| > 250 | 832 (24.8) | 370 (21.8) | 44.4 (41.1–47.9) |
| |
| DADIc score | ≤ 22.75 | 842 (25.2) | 469 (27.7) | 55.7 (52.3–59.1) | ref. |
| (missing information: | 23–27.25 | 837 (25.0) | 439 (25.9) | 52.5 (49.0–55.9) | -2.6 (-7.4–2.1) |
| 27.5–31.75 | 834 (24.9) | 404 (23.8) | 48.9 (45.0–51.9) |
| |
| ≥ 32 | 831 (24.9) | 381 (22.5) | 45.8 (42.4–49.3) |
| |
aAdjusted for gender, age, GPs per practice, number of listed patients per GP and DADI score in categories as presented in the table
bPP percentage points
cDADI Danish deprivation index
Bold indicates statistically significant difference in adjusted response rate (p ≤ 0.05)
Reported well-being and job satisfaction among participating GPs
|
| % (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Burnout/engagement (MBI) | ||
| Emotional exhaustion (EE) | ||
| High (indicative of burnout) | 519 | 30.6 (28.4–32.8) |
| Medium | 501 | 29.5 (27.4–31.8) |
| Low | 677 | 39.9 (37.6–42.3) |
| Depersonalisation (DP) | ||
| High (indicative of burnout) | 357 | 21.0 (19.1–23.1) |
| Medium | 505 | 29.8 (27.6–32.0) |
| Low | 835 | 49.2 (46.8–51.6) |
| Personal accomplishment (PA) | ||
| Low (indicative of burnout) | 621 | 36.6 (34.3–38.9) |
| Medium | 810 | 47.7 (45.3–50.1) |
| High | 266 | 15.7 (13.9–17.5) |
| Overall job satisfaction (WCW-JSS, single item) | ||
| Low (score ≤ 3) | 375 | 22.1 (20.1–24.1) |
| Moderate (score 4–5) | 564 | 33.2 (31.0–35.5) |
| High (score ≥ 6) | 758 | 44.7 (42.3–47.1) |
| Perceived stress (PSS-10) | ||
| Score ≥ 18 (indicative of high stress) | 345 | 20.6 (18.7–22.6) |
| General well-being (WHO-5) | ||
| Poor (score ≤ 50) | 312 | 18.6 (16.8–20.6) |
| Moderate | 506 | 30.3 (28.1–32.5) |
| Good (score > 70) | 855 | 51.1 (48.7–53.5) |
| Self-rated health (SF-12, single item) | ||
| Poor | 6 | 0.4 (0.1–0.8) |
| Fair | 129 | 7.7 (6.5–9.1) |
| Good | 545 | 32.6 (30.3–34.9) |
| Very good or excellent | 994 | 59.4 (57.0–61.7) |
| Work-life balance | ||
| Poor | 272 | 16.2 (14.5–18.1) |
| Moderate | 743 | 44.4 (42.0–46.8) |
| Good | 660 | 39.4 (37.1–41.8) |
| Strains in private life | ||
| No | 935 | 56.6 (54.2–59.0) |
| A little | 419 | 25.4 (23.3–27.5) |
| Some | 250 | 15.1 (13.4–17.0) |
| A lot | 48 | 2.9 (2.1–3.8) |
Fig. 3a Percentage of GPs with burnout indicative scores on at least 2 subscales, high perceived stress (PSS-10 ≥ 18) and poor general well-being (WHO-5 ≤ 50). (N = 1673 GPs who responded to all items). b Percentage of GPs without any burnout indicative subscale scores, high overall job satisfaction (single item score ≥ 6) and high general well-being (WHO-5 > 70). (N = 1673 who GPs responded to all items)
Associations between GP-reported well-being and job satisfaction and gender, age and type of practice. Odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals adjusted for GP gender, age and type of practice
| Male | 46–59 years | ≥ 60 years | Group practice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (female as ref.) | (≤ 45 years as ref.) | (solo practice as ref.) | ||
|
| ||||
| EE high | 1.00 (0.81–1.24) | 1.15 (0.90–1.46) |
| 0.84 (0.65–1.07) |
| DP high |
| 0.96 (0.73–1.26) |
| 0.92 (0.70–1.22) |
| PA low | 1.11 (0.91–1.37) | 1.15 (0.91–1.46) | 0.96 (0.72–1.28) | 0.85 (0.68–1.07) |
| Job satisfaction lowa |
|
| 1.32 (0.96–1.86) | 0.93 (0.72–1.20) |
| Perceived stress high | 0.83 (0.65–1.08) | 1.06 (0.81–1.40) |
| 0.88 (0.66–1.17) |
| General well-being poor | 1.08 (0.84–1.40) | 1.03 (0.77–1.40) |
| 0.77 (0.58–1.03) |
| Self-rated health poor or fair | 1.00 (0.69–1.45) |
| 1.06 (0.62–1.82) | 0.81 (0.54–1.21) |
| Work-life balance poor | 0.87 (0.66–1.15) | 0.91 (0.68–1.23) |
|
|
| Strains in private life (some/a lot) | 0.87 (0.67–1.13) | 1.17 (0.87–1.58) | 0.85 (0.59–1.24) | 0.94 (0.70–1.26) |
| Combinations of measures | ||||
| Complete burnout syndrome (EE high, DP high and PA low) |
|
| 0.66 (0.40–1.09) | 0.91 (0.64–1.30) |
| Poor overall mental health (≥ 2 burnout symptoms, high perceived stress and poor general well-being) |
| 1.24 (0.83–1.83) |
| 0.80 (0.53–1.20) |
|
| ||||
| EE low |
| 0.95 (0.75–1.20) |
| 0.89 (0.76–1.12) |
| DP low |
| 1.02 (0.81–1.29) |
| 0.87 (0.69–1.09) |
| PA high | 0.92 (0.70–1.21) | 1.09 (0.80–1.50) | 1.29 (0.90–1.88) | 0.89 (0.66–1.20) |
| Job satisfaction highb |
|
| 0.87 (0.64–1.19) | 0.88 (0.67–1.15) |
| General well-being high | 1.15 (0.94–1.41) |
|
| 1.09 (0.87–1.37) |
| Work-life balance good |
| 1.23 (0.97–1.57) |
| 1.23 (0.97–1.56) |
| Combinations of measures | ||||
| Engagement (EE low, DP low and PA high) | 1.01 (0.72–1.43) | 1.26 (0.83–1.91) |
| 0.92 (0.64–1.34) |
| No burnout symptoms, high general well-being and high overall job satisfaction | 0.96 (0.76–1.21) | 0.93 (0.70–1.21) | 1.28 (0.94–1.74) | 0.86 (0.67–1.12) |
aLow: 1st quartile (WCW-JSS score ≤ 41)
bHigh: 4th quartile (WCW-JSS score ≥ 59)
EE Emotional exhaustion, DP Depersonalisation, PA Personal accomplishment
Bold indicates statistically significant results (p ≤ 0.05)