P-572 The occupational challenges reported by UK embryologists: stress, fatigue, and burnout

Abstract Study question To determine the prevalence of occupational stress, fatigue, and burnout reported by UK embryologists and their perceived impact of work conditions on wellbeing. Summary answer The surveyed UK embryologists reported low somatic symptom severity and moderate perceived stress,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human reproduction (Oxford) 2023-06, Vol.38 (Supplement_1)
Hauptverfasser: Murphy, A, Lapczynski, M, Proctor, G, Meyer, E C, Glynn, T, Domar, A, Gameiro, S, Palmer, G, Collins, M G
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Study question To determine the prevalence of occupational stress, fatigue, and burnout reported by UK embryologists and their perceived impact of work conditions on wellbeing. Summary answer The surveyed UK embryologists reported low somatic symptom severity and moderate perceived stress, but high levels of burnout and overall stressful working conditions. What is known already High levels of occupational stress, fatigue, burnout, and occupational health issues have been reported among embryologists in the Spanish, US, and international surveys. These issues were associated with embryologist’s occupational challenges and work conditions. Most (58.3%) of the previous UK survey participants reported work-related health issues, including stress/mental health problems (27.8%). However, that study did not evaluate stress and burnout utilizing the same standardized measures as recent US and international surveys, both of which identified considerably higher burnout than the Spanish survey. The present study will address this gap and identify issues that concern UK embryologists using our survey toolkit. Study design, size, duration A cross-sectional, mixed methods web-based survey was sent via email to 253 of an estimated ∼400 UK embryologists working in Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA)-licensed UK ART/IVF clinics and private practices in January 2023. Participants self-reported their stress levels, fatigue, burnout, and work conditions (cryopreservation, technology, overtime work, doing double-work, employer understanding, etc.). Participants/materials, setting, methods Proportions across the Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey (MBI-GS), Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-15), and a single-item work unit grade (A–F), and customized occupational and sociodemographic questionnaires were calculated using descriptive statistics. Welch’s t-test and ANOVA to compare PSS and PHQ-15 scores between the groups categorized by occupational questions, and Pearson’s correlation coefficients and multivariate analysis to cross-correlate statistically significant and biologically important parameters will be utilized once the survey is closed. Main results and the role of chance To date, of 253 embryologists, 104 (41%) completed the survey (mean age 34.3 years, 88% female); 77% worked in private/for-profit, 17% government, 5% corporate, and 1% academic settings. A total of 60% of the respondents reported symptoms of
ISSN:0268-1161
1460-2350
DOI:10.1093/humrep/dead093.906