| Literature DB >> 35855030 |
Shweta Iyer1, Shahzmah Suleman2, Yuqing Qiu1, Shari Platt1.
Abstract
Introduction: while physician burnout has been studied in high-income countries, more research is necessary on burnout in lesser-income regions such as Tanzania. This study aimed to determine levels of burnout in Tanzanian physicians and to understand the contributing risk factors for burnout in this region.Entities:
Keywords: Burnout; Tanzania; global health; wellness
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35855030 PMCID: PMC9250671 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.298.31055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1patient enrollment flow diagram
demographics
| Burnout (EM) | No burnout (EM) | Burnout (specialist) | No burnout (specialist) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 36 (34.75, 37.25) | 37 (36, 39.5) | 37 (35, 39) | 36 (35, 44) | |
| Gender | Female | 6 (67%) | 3 (33%) | 8 (67%) | 4 (33%) |
| Male | 13 (65%) | 7 (35%) | 17 (77%) | 5 (23%) | |
| Marital status | Married or domestic partner | 15 (65%) | 8 (35%) | 22 (73%) | 8 (27%) |
| Single, never married | 3 (60%) | 2 (40%) | 3 (100%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Divorced/other | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (100%) | |
| Parental status | Children live in home | 10 (59%) | 7 (41%) | 18 (72%) | 7 (28%) |
| Children live out of home | 4 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) | |
| No children | 5 (71%) | 2 (29%) | 5 (71%) | 2 (29%) | |
| Prior career | No | 17 (63%) | 10 (37%) | 22 (73%) | 8 (27%) |
| Yes | 3 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Years of practice | <5 years | 13 (65%) | 7 (35%) | 13 (72%) | 5 (28%) |
| 5 - 10 years | 6 (75%) | 2 (25%) | 6 (75%) | 2 (25%) | |
| >10 years | 0 (0%) | 1 (100%) | 3 (75%) | 1 (25%) | |
| Work environment | Rural/suburban | 2 (33%) | 4 (67%) | N/A | N/A |
| Urban | 17 (74%) | 6 (26%) | N/A | N/A | |
| Median clinical hours per week (IQR) | 49 (34.5, 62.5) | 48 (41.25, 60) | 50 (46, 60) | 55 (45, 71) | |
| Non-clinical work | Yes | 17 (63%) | 10 (37%) | 20 (74%) | 7 (26%) |
| No | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (67%) | 1 (33%) | |
| Wellness program | Yes | 6 (60%) | 4 (40%) | 8 (80%) | 2 (20%) |
| No | 13 (68%) | 6 (32%) | 12 (67%) | 6 (33%) | |
burnout rates based on study definitions
| Burnout (EM) | No burnout (EM) | Burnout (specialist) | No burnout (specialist) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any one of the three subscales | 20 (67%) | 10 (33%) | 26 (70%) | 11 (30%) |
| ALL three subscales | 3 (10%) | 27 (90%) | 5 (14%) | 32 (86%) |
| Either the EE or DP | 18 (60%) | 12 (40%) | 22 (59%) | 15 (41%) |
| Two-item survey: “I feel burned out from my work” and “I have become more callous toward people since I took this job” | 11 (37%) | 19 (63%) | 16 (43%) | 21 (57%) |
EM: emergency medicine; EE: emotional exhaustion; DP: depersonalization
logistic regression analysis for burnout risk factors
| Cohort | Risk factors | OR (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| EM | Primarily working in urban communities (urban vs rural/suburban) | 5.67 (0.88, 49.39) | 0.079+ |
| No adequate coverage for unplanned emergencies or personal leave | 5.67 (0.88, 49.39) | 0.079+ | |
| Not satisfied with your career choice in emergency medicine | 10 (1.45, 203.74) | 0.045* | |
| Felt in the last year that you may opt out of working for the current institution and move to another | 8.5 (1.39, 74.09) | 0.029* | |
| Currently have financial responsibility in housing | 4.5 (0.93, 24.97) | 0.069+ | |
| Specialist | Work overnight shifts | 7.5 (0.97, 158.55) | 0.09+ |
| There is unnecessary administrative paperwork | 6.67 (1.17, 46.47) | 0.039* | |
| Pressured by your institution to achieve patient satisfaction | 11.4 (1.18, 260.86) | 0.053+ | |
| Pressured to decrease length of stay for your patients | 5 (0.91, 32.78) | 0.072+ | |
| Have meaningful mentorship | 5.57 (0.99, 45.63) | 0.068+ | |
| Had a close friend or family member die | 0.18 (0.03, 1.05) | 0.059+ |
+p<0.1; *p<0.05; EM: emergency medicine