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Wellness and Coping of Physicians Who Worked in ICUs During the Pandemic: A Multicenter Cross-Sectional North American Survey*

Authors :
Karen E A, Burns
Marc, Moss
Edmund, Lorens
Elizabeth Karin Ann, Jose
Claudio M, Martin
Elizabeth M, Viglianti
Alison, Fox-Robichaud
Kusum S, Mathews
Kathleen, Akgun
Snigdha, Jain
Hayley, Gershengorn
Sangeeta, Mehta
Jenny E, Han
Gregory S, Martin
Janice M, Liebler
Renee D, Stapleton
Polina, Trachuk
Kelly C, Vranas
Abigail, Chua
Margaret S, Herridge
Jennifer L Y, Tsang
Michelle, Biehl
Ellen L, Burnham
Jen-Ting, Chen
Engi F, Attia
Amira, Mohamed
Michelle S, Harkins
Sheryll M, Soriano
Aline, Maddux
Julia C, West
Andrew R, Badke
Sean M, Bagshaw
Alexandra, Binnie
W Graham, Carlos
Başak, Çoruh
Kristina, Crothers
Frederick, D'Aragon
Joshua Lee, Denson
John W, Drover
Gregg, Eschun
Anna, Geagea
Donald, Griesdale
Rachel, Hadler
Jennifer, Hancock
Jovan, Hasmatali
Bhavika, Kaul
Meeta Prasad, Kerlin
Rachel, Kohn
D James, Kutsogiannis
Scott M, Matson
Peter E, Morris
Bojan, Paunovic
Ithan D, Peltan
Dominique, Piquette
Mina, Pirzadeh
Krishna, Pulchan
Lynn M, Schnapp
Curtis N, Sessler
Heather, Smith
Eric, Sy
Subarna, Thirugnanam
Rachel K, McDonald
Katie A, McPherson
Monica, Kraft
Michelle, Spiegel
Peter M, Dodek
Source :
Critical Care Medicine. 50:1689-1700
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Few surveys have focused on physician moral distress, burnout, and professional fulfilment. We assessed physician wellness and coping during the COVID-19 pandemic.Cross-sectional survey using four validated instruments.Sixty-two sites in Canada and the United States.Attending physicians (adult, pediatric; intensivist, nonintensivist) who worked in North American ICUs.None.We analysed 431 questionnaires (43.3% response rate) from 25 states and eight provinces. Respondents were predominantly male (229 [55.6%]) and in practice for 11.8 ± 9.8 years. Compared with prepandemic, respondents reported significant intrapandemic increases in days worked/mo, ICU bed occupancy, and self-reported moral distress (240 [56.9%]) and burnout (259 [63.8%]). Of the 10 top-ranked items that incited moral distress, most pertained to regulatory/organizational ( n = 6) or local/institutional ( n = 2) issues or both ( n = 2). Average moral distress (95.6 ± 66.9), professional fulfilment (6.5 ± 2.1), and burnout scores (3.6 ± 2.0) were moderate with 227 physicians (54.6%) meeting burnout criteria. A significant dose-response existed between COVID-19 patient volume and moral distress scores. Physicians who worked more days/mo and more scheduled in-house nightshifts, especially combined with more unscheduled in-house nightshifts, experienced significantly more moral distress. One in five physicians used at least one maladaptive coping strategy. We identified four coping profiles (active/social, avoidant, mixed/ambivalent, infrequent) that were associated with significant differences across all wellness measures.Despite moderate intrapandemic moral distress and burnout, physicians experienced moderate professional fulfilment. However, one in five physicians used at least one maladaptive coping strategy. We highlight potentially modifiable factors at individual, institutional, and regulatory levels to enhance physician wellness.

Details

ISSN :
00903493
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8753bf6e05f9d633f6d82d25a82c8f70
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0000000000005674