| Literature DB >> 30881549 |
Michelle D Lall1, Theodore J Gaeta2,3, Arlene S Chung4, Sneha A Chinai5, Manish Garg6,7, Abbas Husain8, Cara Kanter7, Sorabh Khandelwal9, Caitlin S Rublee9, Ramin R Tabatabai10, James Kimo Takayesu11, Mohammad Zaher12, Nadine T Himelfarb13.
Abstract
Part One of this two-article series reviews assessment tools to measure burnout and other negative states. Physician well-being goes beyond merely the absence of burnout. Transient episodes of burnout are to be expected. Measuring burnout alone is shortsighted. Well-being includes being challenged, thriving, and achieving success in various aspects of personal and professional life. In this second part of the series, we identify and describe assessment tools related to wellness, quality of life, resilience, coping skills, and other positive states.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30881549 PMCID: PMC6404719 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2019.1.39666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Positive state assessment tools.
| Name of instrument | Brief description | Number of items | Time to complete | Cost | Where to find it | Notes | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Well-being and quality of life | ||||||||
| Physician Wellness Inventory | It has three scales: career purpose, cognitive flexibility and distress. | 14 items | Two minutes | free | There are only two published studies using this instrument | Free | Limited studies, need more data on reliability and validity | |
| Physician Well Being Index (PWBI) | Used to: | Seven Items | < Five minutes | Free for individuals | Designed to measure burnout, provide valuable resources when people them the most, and track progress over time to promote self-awareness. | Short | Costly | |
| Quality of Life Linear Analog Scale Assessment (LASA) | LASA includes five simple items, each of which targets a specific domain of quality of life. | Five items | < Five minutes | Free | Specific domains include physical well-being (i.e., fatigue, activity level), emotional well-being (i.e., depression, anxiety, stress), spiritual well-being (i.e., sense of meaning, relationship with God), and intellectual well-being (i.e., ability to think clearly, concentrate). | Short | Multiple forms exist | |
| Professional Quality of Life Scale (ProQOL) | Self-report measure that asks the respondent to reflect on his or her experiences at work as a human service provider, both positive and negative, in the past 30 days. | 30 items | 5–10 minutes | Free, must credit the author | The ProQOL consists of three separate subscales: Compassion Satisfaction, Burnout, and Secondary Traumatic Stress. Standardized scores exist for all three (< 23 = low, 23–41 = average, > 41 = high). No composite score is available. It is recommended to complete the measure in its entirety rather than separate the questions into separate tests divided by subscale. | Free | Indirect measure of “wellness” | |
| Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) | Self-reported measure of how easily a person can fall asleep in different situations | Eight items | One minute | Free for individual use | The ESS specifically distinguishes reports of dozing behavior from feelings of fatigue and drowsiness/sleepiness | Free | Subjective | |
| Resilience and mindfulness | ||||||||
| Connor Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) | Used for clinical practice as a measure of stress and adaptability. Also used to evaluate response to clinical interventions. | 25 items | 5–10 minutes | Need agreement from authors with small fee | The scale has been developed and tested as a measure of degree of resilience. The scale also has promise as a method to screen people for high, intermediate or low resilience. | Well validated | Small fee. | |
| Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) | Used to measure the perception of stress; measure of the degree to which situations in one’s life are appraised as stressful; items are designed to tap how unpredictable, uncontrollable and overloaded respondents find their lives; direct queries of current experienced stress | 14 items | 10–15 minutes | Free | A psychometrically sound global measure of perceived stress that could provide valuable information about the relationship between stress and pathology (correlations between high perceived stress and burnout). | Free | Not validated in health care providers | |
| Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations (CISS) | The CISS measures three types of coping styles: task-oriented coping, emotion-oriented coping, and avoidance-oriented coping. It helps you determine the preferred coping style. | 48 items | 10 minutes | CISS Manual = $57 | Offers precision in predicting preferred coping styles, and contributes to understanding the differential relationships between coping styles and other personality variables. | Reliable and valid | Cost | |
| Ways of Coping Scale (WAYS) | The Ways of Coping Questionnaire is a 66-item instrument containing a wide range of thoughts and acts that people use to deal with the internal and/or external demands of specific stressful encounters. | 66 items | 10 minutes | $50 for the manual | An assessment of coping in relation to a specific stressful encounter. Not designed to be used as an assessment of coping styles or traits. | Well validated | Cost | |
| The COPE Inventory (brief) | The COPE Inventory is a multidimensional coping inventory to assess the different ways in which people respond to stress. | 28 items | 15 minutes | Free | Five scales (of four items each) measure conceptually distinct aspects of problem-focused coping (active coping, planning, suppression of competing activities, restraint coping, seeking of instrumental social support) | Free | Not validated in a physician population. | |
| Mood and personality | ||||||||
| Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) | Introspective self-assessment tool that identifies psychological preferences in how people interact with their environments and make decisions. | 93 items | 15 minutes | $49.95 per user | Provides insight into an individual’s personality traits, can help us identify weaknesses and be better communicators and decision makers | Widely used and highly regarded | Cost | |
| Profile of Mood States (POMS 2) | Self-report psychological rating scale use to assess transient, distinct mood states. Measures multiple dimensions of mood over a distinct period of time which include: Anger-Hostility, Confusion-Bewilderment, Depression-Dejection, Fatigue-Inertia, Tension-Anxiety, Vigor-Activity and Friendliness. | Full version: | Full version: | Manual $92, and | Provides insight into an individual’s current mood state and how that may affect their performance at work and interaction with others. | Allows for real-time assessment of risks for burnout, second victim syndrome, etc. | Cost | |
| Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument (TKI) | Self-assessment tool that identifies individual conflict-handling styles, which are categorized into 5 “modes”: competing, collaborating, compromising, avoiding, and accommodating | 30 item | 15 minutes | $18.95 each, $179 pack of 10 | Provides a pragmatic, situational approach to conflict resolution, change management, leadership development, and communication | Relevant | Cost | |
Figure 1Flow diagram of literature search algorithm and assessment tool selection.