Literature DB >> 31193838

Not Until We Lose Our Sanity or Anymore Lives.

Abd Moain Abu Dabrh1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31193838      PMCID: PMC6543253          DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocpiqo.2019.02.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes        ISSN: 2542-4548


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To the Editor: A few years ago, I contemplated the decision to shift my career path from a practicing physician to a full-time academic researcher. I reflected on the things I knew I would miss: the daily-interactions with patients; and the immense joy of healing and/or improving the quality of their lives. Among the main reasons leading to this early career-changing decision were my compromised sense of joy in practicing medicine, and burnout resulting from challenging healthcare system structure. I could not find the motivation to be part of these seemingly-flawed systems, in my humble opinion, leaving me feeling ambivalent. After reflective prayers and conversations with my family, colleagues-friends, and mentors, I decided to support the collective mission-of-caring for our patients through an equally significant path—research. My mission is to help in transforming health care to an evidence-based, expert-guided, minimally disruptive, and careful and thoughtful system where the goals of the patients, indeed, come first. Concurrently, not at the expense of those who willingly and selflessly support those goals of caring; clinician burnout should not be the yield of this mission. Clinicians encounter multidimensional, long-past, and well-documented challenges while delivering health care, making burnout a prevalent syndrome, which may lead patients to experience lower quality of care and less favorable outcomes.2, 3 The impact does not just stop there; it affects clinicians personally as well as their milieu—family, friends and other aspects of their lives. Friends and peers in healthcare from across the globe experience burnout. While each has unique challenges, there is consensus that the mission of medicine has been dramatically and sadly compromised by clinician burnout. So, when did we veer off the noble path of care? How do we get back on it? While the evidence suggests that burnout is mainly a system-driven challenges, I believe that all of us, as individuals, may contribute to finding solutions to minimizing burnout and increasing well-being.4, 5 Despite these challenges, there is still a concurrent clinician-led movement of hope; a change shall come. This poses the need to advocate shifting health care towards a minimally disruptive care that accounts for the capacity and workload encompassed by all stakeholders: patients, caregivers, clinicians, and health care systems. This is a sincere invitation to all of us to pause, to think, reassess, mobilize, collaborate, and move forward together. I am privileged to work within a supportive and enjoyable work environment that empowers me and my colleagues to lift each other up through personal and professional growth, as we continue exploring solutions to better health care delivery; yet as a physician-researcher, I experience my own challenges, including, sometimes, burnout. I admire the strength and resilience fellow clinicians, researchers, and health care allies muster while facing daily challenges in an overly-regulated environment as they serve our patients. Recently, I was profoundly saddened by the news of losing a past colleague who had struggled silently, and sadly found no escape but through suicide. Enough is enough. We need to find the way-forward; we ought to speak up; to kindly and thoughtfully work together; soon, now, and not until we lose our sanity or anymore lives.
  5 in total

Review 1.  Executive Leadership and Physician Well-being: Nine Organizational Strategies to Promote Engagement and Reduce Burnout.

Authors:  Tait D Shanafelt; John H Noseworthy
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2016-11-18       Impact factor: 7.616

2.  Minimally disruptive medicine: the evidence and conceptual progress supporting a new era of healthcare.

Authors:  A M Abu Dabrh; K Gallacher; K R Boehmer; I G Hargraves; F S Mair
Journal:  J R Coll Physicians Edinb       Date:  2015

Review 3.  Physician burnout: contributors, consequences and solutions.

Authors:  C P West; L N Dyrbye; T D Shanafelt
Journal:  J Intern Med       Date:  2018-03-24       Impact factor: 8.989

Review 4.  An Organization Model to Assist Individual Physicians, Scientists, and Senior Health Care Administrators With Personal and Professional Needs.

Authors:  Tait D Shanafelt; Deborah J Lightner; Christopher R Conley; Steven P Petrou; Jarrett W Richardson; Pamela J Schroeder; William A Brown
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 7.616

Review 5.  The relationship between physician burnout and quality of healthcare in terms of safety and acceptability: a systematic review.

Authors:  Carolyn S Dewa; Desmond Loong; Sarah Bonato; Lucy Trojanowski
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 2.692

  5 in total
  1 in total

1.  Minimally disruptive medicine (MDM) in clinical practice: a qualitative case study of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) clinic care model.

Authors:  Abd Moain Abu Dabrh; Kasey R Boehmer; Nathan Shippee; Stacey A Rizza; Adam I Perlman; Sara R Dick; Emma M Behnken; Victor M Montori
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 2.908

  1 in total

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