Feelings of failure, helplessness, detachment, loss of motivation, and feeling unable to cope are all symptoms of burnout. While this phenomenon is experienced by workers the world over, it becomes increasingly worrisome when it can impact other people’s health outcomes.
The National Training Survey found that “the risk of [physician] burnout is now at its worst since it was first tracked in 2018.” An alarming 44% of physicians felt “exhausted in the morning at the thought of another day at work.” Another study found that “40% of physicians report at least one symptom of burnout”. They also noted that physicians are at an increased risk of burnout relative to people in other fields. Worrying findings when nations around the world, including the UK, are facing “crippling shortages” of doctors.
Expectations are high when you hold people’s lives in your hands, so it is little wonder that physicians report emotional exhaustion and feeling overextended. When faced with burnout, many often have to deal with increasing depersonalization and a reduced sense of personal accomplishment as well; leading to poor work-life balance and career dissatisfaction. The choice to become a healthcare provider is a very personal one, often made for altruistic reasons. But stresses from the pandemic and staffing shortages have caused a three-fold increase in career choice regret and a corresponding increase in turnover for physicians.
A study from the British Medical Journal found that burnout is associated with a four-fold decrease in job satisfaction and feeling of personal accomplishment. Those feeling weighed down by their jobs also showed a decrease in professionalism, and reports of patient satisfaction declined. The study also found that physicians feeling burned out are also less productive.
Perhaps the most worrying finding from the study was the risk to patient safety. The authors found that physicians feeling burned out were twice as likely to make mistakes. These real-world impacts can lead to life-threatening consequences now and in the future, as more physicians might be tempted to leave their job if things don’t change.