Physician Burnout, Well-being, and Work Unit Safety Grades in Relationship to Reported Medical Errors

To evaluate physician burnout, well-being, and work unit safety grades in relationship to perceived major medical errors. From August 28, 2014, to October 6, 2014, we conducted a population-based survey of US physicians in active practice regarding burnout, fatigue, suicidal ideation, work unit safe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mayo Clinic proceedings 2018-11, Vol.93 (11), p.1571-1580
Hauptverfasser: Tawfik, Daniel S., Profit, Jochen, Morgenthaler, Timothy I., Satele, Daniel V., Sinsky, Christine A., Dyrbye, Liselotte N., Tutty, Michael A., West, Colin P., Shanafelt, Tait D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To evaluate physician burnout, well-being, and work unit safety grades in relationship to perceived major medical errors. From August 28, 2014, to October 6, 2014, we conducted a population-based survey of US physicians in active practice regarding burnout, fatigue, suicidal ideation, work unit safety grade, and recent medical errors. Multivariate logistic regression and mixed-effects hierarchical models evaluated the associations among burnout, well-being measures, work unit safety grades, and medical errors. Of 6695 responding physicians in active practice, 6586 provided information on the areas of interest: 3574 (54.3%) reported symptoms of burnout, 2163 (32.8%) reported excessive fatigue, and 427 (6.5%) reported recent suicidal ideation, with 255 of 6563 (3.9%) reporting a poor or failing patient safety grade in their primary work area and 691 of 6586 (10.5%) reporting a major medical error in the prior 3 months. Physicians reporting errors were more likely to have symptoms of burnout (77.6% vs 51.5%; P
ISSN:0025-6196
1942-5546
DOI:10.1016/j.mayocp.2018.05.014