4.4 Article

A Survey of Burnout Among Neurocritical Care Practitioners

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NEUROCRITICAL CARE
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HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12028-023-01750-0

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Burnout; Neurocritical care; Neurology; Maslach Burnout Inventory

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This study assesses the prevalence, contributing factors, and potential interventions to reduce burnout among medical professionals in the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS). Results show that over half of the participants meet the criteria for burnout. Factors associated with burnout include feeling burned out now and in the past, not having an effective/responsive supervisor, thinking about leaving one's job due to burnout, and leaving one's job due to burnout. Action is needed from hospital, organizational, local, and federal governmental leaders and society as a whole to address and ameliorate burnout among healthcare professionals.
BackgroundBurnout is a growing problem among medical professionals, reaching a crisis proportion. It is defined by emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and career dissatisfaction and is triggered by a mismatch between the values of the person and the demands of the workplace. Burnout has not previously been examined thoroughly in the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS). The purpose of this study is to assess the prevalence, contributing factors, and potential interventions to reduce burnout within the NCS.MethodsA cross-sectional study of burnout was conducted using a survey distributed to members of the NCS. The electronic survey included personal and professional characteristic questions and the Maslach Burnout Inventory Human Services Survey for Medical Personnel (MBI). This validated measure assesses for emotional exhaustion (EE), depersonalization (DP), and personal achievement (PA). These subscales are scored as high, moderate, or low. Burnout (MBI) was defined as a high score in either EE or DP or a low score in PA. A Likert scale (0-6) was added to the MBI (which contained 22 questions) to provide summary data for the frequencies of each particular feeling. Categorical variables were compared using chi(2) tests, and continuous variables were compared using t-tests.ResultsA total of 82% (204 of 248) of participants completed the entire questionnaire; 61% (124 of 204) were burned out by MBI criteria. A high score in EE was present in 46% (94 of 204), a high score in DP was present in 42% (85 of 204), and a low score in PA was present in 29% (60 of 204). The variables feeling burned out now, feeling burned out in the past, not having an effective/responsive supervisor, thinking about leaving one's job due to burnout, and leaving one's job due to burnout were significantly associated with burnout (MBI) (p < 0.05). Burnout (MBI) was also higher among respondents early in practice (currently training/post training 0-5 years) than among respondents post training 21 or more years. In addition, insufficient support staff contributed to burnout, whereas improved workplace autonomy was the most protective factor.ConclusionsOur study is the first to characterize burnout among a cross-section of physicians, pharmacists, nurses, and other practitioners in the NCS. A call to action and a genuine commitment by the hospital, organizational, local, and federal governmental leaders and society as a whole is essential to advocate for interventions to ameliorate burnout and care for our health care professionals.

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