| Literature DB >> 32223701 |
Fay J Hlubocky1, Lynne P Taylor2, Jonathan M Marron3, Rebecca A Spence4, Molly M McGinnis4, Richard F Brown5, Daniel C McFarland6, Eric D Tetzlaff7, Colleen M Gallagher8, Abby R Rosenberg9, Beth Popp10, Konstantin Dragnev11, Linda D Bosserman12, Denise M Dudzinski13, Sonali Smith1, Monica Chatwal14, Manali I Patel15, Merry J Markham16, Kathryn Levit17, Eduardo Bruera8, Ronald M Epstein18, Marie Brown19, Anthony L Back20, Tait D Shanafelt21, Arif H Kamal22.
Abstract
Oncologist well-being is critical to initiating and maintaining the physician-patient relationship, yet many oncologists suffer from symptoms of burnout. Burnout has been linked to poor physical and mental health, as well as increased medical errors, patient dissatisfaction, and workforce attrition. In this Call to Action article, we discuss causes of and interventions for burnout and moral distress in oncology, highlight existing interventions, and provide recommendations for addressing burnout and improving well-being at the individual and organizational levels to deliver ethical, quality cancer care.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32223701 PMCID: PMC7351333 DOI: 10.1200/JOP.19.00806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCO Oncol Pract ISSN: 2688-1527