Alexandros G .Sfakianakis,ENT,Anapafeos 5 Agios Nikolaos Crete 72100 Greece,00302841026182

Τετάρτη 24 Ιουλίου 2019

Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Contributors: Burnout and Resilience in Obstetrics and Gynecology
No abstract available

Foreword: Burnout and Resilience in Obstetrics and Gynecology
No abstract available

Burnout in Obstetricians and Gynecologists
imageProfessional burnout threatens all high-functioning professionals and affects not only the individual, but, by extension, the patients they serve. The characteristics that make someone competitive for medical school, residency, or successful in academics or practice, make us particularly vulnerable to burnout: compulsive dedication to goals (and patients), motivation to succeed, self-reliance, leadership experience, delayed gratification, and others. Estimates of the prevalence of burnout in medicine vary widely but are consistently >40% and often as high as 75%. Obstetricians and gynecologists are not unique in suffering from burnout but do rank among the top medical specialties for the rate of professional burnout reported. When burnout is present, there is reduced job satisfaction, lower productivity, increased medical errors (and morbidity), degraded interpersonal interactions, and higher physician dropout rates. Career dissatisfaction, early retirement, and even regret surrounding the original choice of career are all common when burnout is present. There is a growing body of individual actions that can be taken to reduce or reverse the impact of burnout, but the first steps are to understand the causes and identify the symptoms.

Burnout in OB/GYN Students and Residents
imageIn this article we address the concept of burnout, first in the medical student setting, and then in the residency setting. We will review the prevalence followed by a discussion of risk factors, consequences, and finally thoughts on prevention and intervention.

Interventions to Reduce Burnout and Improve Resilience: Impact on a Health System's Outcomes
imageWith the continuously changing health care environment and dramatic shift in patient demographics, institutions have the responsibility of identifying and dedicating resources for maintaining and improving wellness and resilience among front line providers to assure the quality of patient care. Our institution, the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (OSUWMC), has addressed the goal to decrease burnout for providers in a multistep, multiprofessional, and multiyear program starting firstly with institutional cultural change then focused provider interventions, and lastly, proactive resilience engagement. We describe herein our approach and outcomes as measured by provider wellness and health system outcomes. In addition, we address the overall feasibility and effectiveness of these programs in promoting provider compassion and mindfulness while reducing burnout and improving resilience. Institutional culture change and readiness were initiated in 2010 with the introduction of Crew Resource Management training for all providers across the OSUWMC. This multiyear program was implemented and has been sustained to the current day. Focused interventions to improve mindfulness were undertaken in the form of both Mindfulness in Motion (MIM) training for intensive care unit personnel and a "flipped classroom" mindfulness training for faculty and residents. Lastly, sustainable changes were introduced in the form of the Gabbe Health and Wellness program which consists of interprofessional MIM training and other wellness offerings for staff, faculty, and residents embedded across the entire medical center. The introduction of Crew Resource Management in 2010 continues to be endorsed and supported throughout OSUWMC for all providers, including residents and students. The improvements seen have not only improved patient satisfaction but also reduced patient safety events and improved national reputation for the institution as a whole. Subsequently, MIM training for intensive care unit providers has resulted in improved resilience as well as decreased patient safety events. In addition, the "flipped classroom" mindfulness training for residents and faculty has resulted in improvements in providing calm and compassionate care, improvements in physician wellbeing, and reductions in emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. Lastly, implementing the Gabbe Health and Wellness program inclusive of interprofessional MIM training for staff, faculty, and residents has resulted in significant reductions in burnout while significantly increasing resilience postintervention. The engagement from staff and enthusiasm to continue this program have escalated and been positively accepted across OSUWMC. To reduce the incidence of burnout, improve resilience, and ultimately improve patient outcomes, a health system must identify and prioritize a commitment and dedication of resources to develop and sustain a multimodal and interprofessional approach to change. These initiatives at OSU originated with cultural transformation allowing the acceptance of change in the form of mindfulness training, resilience building, and the engagement of organizational science, so as to demonstrate the outcomes and impact to the health system and academic peers. Herein we describe the work that has been done thus far, both published and in progress, to understand our journey.

The Impact of Burnout on the Obstetrics and Gynecology Workforce
imageAlthough there has been discussion of a shortage of surgical specialties including OB/GYN, consensus is difficult because of the multiple variables involved in estimating both supply and demand. In addition, burnout has become more recognized as a variable that has not been taken into account in estimating a shortage of OB/GYNs. We estimate OB/GYN physician shortages of 17%, 24%, and 31% by 2030, 2040, and 2050, respectively. Here, we examine the impact of burnout on the OB/GYN workforce. Specifically, we address the associations of burnout, reduction in clinical productivity as well as early retirement. We also discuss the implications of the substantial increase of female OB/GYNs to ∼66% of workforce over the next 10 years and how this may impact the impending OB/GYN shortage. Finally, we briefly consider possible solutions to workforce issues causing burnout.

Physician Work-Life Integration: Challenges and Strategies for Improvement
imageIncreasing evidence shows that physician well-being is linked to patient outcomes, patient and physician satisfaction, and workforce retention. Physician well-being is a broad construct that includes various dimensions of distress (stress, anxiety, fatigue, burnout) and professional fulfillment (meaning in work, engagement). Work-life integration (WLI) is one important component of physician well-being. We will review the current state of WLI among physicians as well as some strategies to improve this aspect of physician well-being. We address this topic through the lens of obstetrics and gynecology, including a discussion of specialty-specific characteristics that present unique challenges and opportunities to improve WLI.

Burnout Woman-Style: The Female Face of Burnout in Obstetrics and Gynecology
imageThis summary will address important information on women physicians, focusing on those practicing OG. We will review traits more commonly found in women, societal influences that make women physicians more susceptible to burnout, as well as the unique features of the medical profession that affect women differently. We conclude with a discussion of the shared responsibilities of both individuals and institutions for implementing interventions that will effectively improve women's resilience, identification of and recovery from burnout.

Moving From Physician Burnout to Resilience
imageWe contend that work ambivalence is a key building block in fostering physician burnout and its sequalae, while engagement in meaningful work and receiving family support for that work enhances resilience. No singular approach to curbing burnout in OBGYN physicians has received empirical support. Clinical experience suggests that curbing physician burnout requires a combination of workplace redesigns, positive leadership behaviors, and resilience training that teaches practical applications from the fields of resilience, emotional intelligence, positive psychology, and relationship systems. This paper highlights organizational and leadership interventions that foster physician engagement, and describes how physicians can foster personal and family resilience.

Organizational Strategies to Create a Burnout-resistant Environment
imageBurnout afflicts a significant number of academic faculty and clinicians. There are many efforts the individual can undertake to prevent or lessen burnout. However, it not likely these will be successful without the institutional environment that promotes and atmosphere that assures self-efficacy, a sense of value and meaning and clear communication between leaders and members of the organization. This review discusses the factors that organizations and their leaders can leverage to create such an environment. Such measures are critically important not only for the health of the individual but to the organization as well.

Alexandros Sfakianakis
Anapafseos 5 . Agios Nikolaos
Crete.Greece.72100
2841026182
6948891480

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