| Literature DB >> 33504753 |
Takayoshi Shimohata1, Makoto Kubo2, Ikuko Aiba3, Nobutaka Hattori4, Kazuto Yoshida5, Yoshiko Unno6, Kazumasa Yokoyama4, Takashi Ogawa4, Yumiko Kaseda7, Ryoko Koike8, Yuko Shimizu9, Yoshio Tsuboi10, Manabu Doyu11, Sonoko Misawa12, Takafumi Miyachi13, Tatsushi Toda14, Atsushi Takeda15.
Abstract
To identify factors associated with burnout among Japanese physician and to use them in future measures, the Japanese Society of Neurology conducted a survey of neurologists on burnout using a web-based questionnaire in October 2019. A total of 1,261 respondents, 15.0% of the 8,402 members, responded to the survey. The mean of the subscales of the Japanese Burnout Scale was 2.86/5 points for emotional exhaustion, 2.21/5 points for depersonalization, and 3.17/5 points for lack of personal accomplishment. In addition, the burnout of our country's neurologists is not related to workloads such as working hours and the number of patients in charge, but also to a decreased meaningfulness and professional accomplishment. Therefore, it is necessary to take comprehensive measures to improve these issues at the individual, hospital, academic and national levels.Entities:
Keywords: burnout; depersonalization; emotional exhaustion; lack of personal accomplishment; physician
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33504753 DOI: 10.5692/clinicalneurol.cn-001533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rinsho Shinkeigaku ISSN: 0009-918X