- Stimulation and challenge at work. It’s critical to have a job that requires technically difficult tasks, procedures, or intellectual challenges. The ability to interact and collaborate with other physicians further adds depth and richness to hospitalists’ clinical practice. However, it’s important to realize that overstimulation can lead to discomfort and unhappiness.
- Feeling appreciated. Recog-nition for your performance leads to feeling valued at work and has a strong correlation with overall job satisfaction. It keeps hospitalists interested and motivated. However, recognition should be personalized; otherwise, it can have a detrimental effect.
- Control over work. Auto-nomy and control over work is important to ensuring job satisfaction. This includes actively participating in the design of your work schedule and other work-related matters. When decisions are imposed on physicians, it creates tension and stress.
- Work environment. This includes the type of work, support, and opportunities for growth and development, as well as interactions with colleagues and staff.
- Income. Compensation is often fourth or fifth on the list of priorities for physicians. While all of us seek fair compensation for our work, it often is not the main reason we choose an employment.
Solutions
Burnout prevention is the responsibility of all healthcare professionals. It’s critical to promote well-being on all levels: physical, emotional, psychological, and spiritual. The following recommendations are based on various interventions established nationally to address physician burnout:
Establish realistic goals. Identify realistic goals for your professional and personal life, and actively work on balancing the two. Emphasize these goals throughout your professional career, avoiding the natural tendency for postponement.
Improve your work environment. Involve physicians in the design and management of the practice; build flexible schedules that allow coverage during important life events (i.e., graduations, births, weddings); minimize paperwork and improve efficiency; and establish a committee for open discussion of physician wellness issues.
Take care of yourself. Mentorship programs support junior members in their career development and help them balance the challenges of their personal and professional lives. Mentors can detect dissatisfaction and help physicians re-evaluate their interests and career paths. Require physicians to have their own primary-care physician (PCP) to ensure their physical and mental well-being. Offer memberships to fitness centers.
Provide opportunities to grow. Seek opportunities for medical education; address personal goals and aspirations, such as hobbies and interests; and establish sabbatical programs to gain perspective and broaden your horizons.
Fortunately, medicine has an enthusiastic applicant pool. There is hope that highly motivated and qualified students will continue to apply and enter the medical profession. However, there is concern that the dissatisfaction in medicine might influence the caliber of applicants who apply.
Medical education and training needs to address the challenges of practicing medicine. Students should be taught about the challenges of delivering high-quality care, risk management, cost containment, and utilization review. During the clinical years in medical school and residency, trainees need to experience the fast pace of medicine, the realities of payment dilemmas, and increased paperwork. It ultimately is the responsibility of educators in the medical profession to encourage students and residents to establish more accurate expectations of the practice of medicine. TH
Dr. Afsarmanesh is director of hospital medicine quality initiatives at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.
References
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