Back to Search Start Over

Exploring relationships between physician stress, burnout, and diagnostic elements in clinician notes

Authors :
Erin E. Sullivan
Maram Khazen
Sophia D. Arabadjis
Maria Mirica
Jason M. Ramos
Andrew P. J. Olson
Mark Linzer
Gordon D. Schiff
Source :
Diagnosis.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2023.

Abstract

Objectives To understand the relationship between stressful work environments and patient care by assessing work conditions, burnout, and elements of the diagnostic process. Methods Notes and transcripts of audiotaped encounters were assessed for verbal and written documentation related to psychosocial data, differential diagnosis, acknowledgement of uncertainty, and other diagnosis-relevant contextual elements using 5-point Likert scales in seven primary care physicians (PCPs) and 28 patients in urgent care settings. Encounter time spent vs time needed (time pressure) was collected from time stamps and clinician surveys. Study physicians completed surveys on stress, burnout, and work conditions using the Mini-Z survey. Results Physicians with high stress or burnout were less likely to record psychosocial information in transcripts and notes (psychosocial information noted in 0% of encounters in 4 high stress/burned-out physicians), whereas low stress physicians (n=3) recorded psychosocial information consistently in 67% of encounters. Burned-out physicians discussed a differential diagnosis in only 31% of encounters (low counts concentrated in two physicians) vs. in 73% of non-burned-out doctors’ encounters. Burned-out and non-burned-out doctors spent comparable amounts of time with patients (about 25 min). Conclusions Key diagnostic elements were seen less often in encounter transcripts and notes in burned-out urgent care physicians.

Details

ISSN :
2194802X and 21948011
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diagnosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8eefe520d257dfaa2d69d227fb6f8a5b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/dx-2022-0118