ARE PALLIATIVE CARE PROVIDERS: ON FIRE OR BURNED OUT?

Similar documents
Burnout Among Health Care Professionals

Burnout in Palliative Care. Palliative Regional Rounds January 16, 2015 Craig Goldie

Physician Burnout: What Is It and What Causes It?

Disclosures. From Burnout to Resilience: Building Capacity to Thrive at Work. Arif Kamal MD, MBA,

OVERCOMING RESISTANCE TO RESILIENCY PROGRAMS: ONE STEP AT A TIME!

Physician Burnout and Distress: Causes, Consequences, and a Structure For Solutions

Self-care and burnout

Moving beyond burnout to professional engagement and joy. Martina Schulte, MD February 10, 2018

HEALTHCARE PROVIDER BURNOUT: A COACHING APPROACH

Wellness: an Opportunity or an Oxymoron for Medical Educators?

T211 Early Career Burnout in Physician Assistants: A National Survey. Amanda Chapman, MMS, PA-C

Outline 4/18/2018. Disclosure. Poll Everywhere Instructions. Journey to a Resilient and Thriving Pharmacy Workforce

Burnout, Renewal & Mindfulness. Joe Dreher MD, Frank Chessa, PhD & Christine Hein, MD

Addressing Physician Burnout: How to Keep Sane When Things Seem Insane

Nothing to disclose. Learning Objectives 4/10/2014. Caring for the Caregiver: Taking Care of You (first) and Your Staff (second)

R2 - Research presentations

Adult Apgar Test. 1. I am satisfied with the ACCESS I have to my emotions -- to laugh, to be sad, to feel pleasure or even anger.

Welcome. Self-Care Basics in HCH Settings. Tuesday, January 8, We will begin promptly at 1 p.m. Eastern.

Physician Burnout : How the gastroenterologist can cope with the stresses of modern practice

Journey to a Resilient and Thriving Pharmacy Workforce

Health of Physicians. Statement from the Royal Australasian College of Physicians

Ian Nisonson, M.D. 11/2/2017

Factors related to staff stress in HIV/AIDS related palliative care

Benchmarking across sectors: Comparisons of residential dual diagnosis and mental health programs

How Do You Measure Resident Wellness TSVETI MARKOVA, MD, FAAFP R. BRENT STANSFIELD, PHD

AVOIDING PHYSICIAN BURNOUT

Professional Practice: Nursing as a Career, not a Job

The Golden Circle. Why? 1/19/16. Objectives: Why. How. What

NURSING SPECIAL REPORT

Head Nurse Management Style and Staff Nurse Burnout in Central Hospitals, Lao People s Democratic Republic

Measuring both sides of the transplant equation: Psychological tests help evaluate organ recipients and donors

Mrs Catherine Smith RGN/RMN/MBA PHD Student University of Southampton UK

Running on Empty: A Prescription for Healing Physician Burnout. Jeff Morris MD, MBA, FACS: Physician Coach & National Speaker Studer Group

Emergency Medicine Physician Satisfaction and Wellness Committee A Year in Review

Clinician burnout 3/28/ Allina Health System. Decreased effectiveness at work. Disclosure. Objectives. Why caring for the healer matters

Stress pervades pediatrics residency programs.

Nurses' Burnout Effects on Pre-operative Nursing Care for Patients at Cardiac Catheterization Centers in Middle Euphrates Governorates

Resident health and well-being: Building resilience

Prevalence and Determinants of Burnout among Primary Healthcare Physicians in Qatar

Refocusing CPA: a summary of the key changes. Bernadette Harrison CPA Manager Bedfordshire & Luton Mental Health & Social Care Partnership NHS Trust

"Me Time": Investing in Self Care to Stay Centered during Stressful Times

Burnout among Hematology/Oncology Nurse Practitioners

Wisconsin Medical Society Physician Experience Task Force Efforts

Physician Margin, Overload and Burnout

children and families in the community

Family Physician Burnout & Resiliency Dilemma and Strategies

PHYSICIAN BURNOUT DISCLOSURES... A BURNING EPIDEMIC I HAVE NO DISCLOSURES TO REPORT.

Burnout among UPM Teachers of Postgraduate Studies. Naemeh Nahavandi

Association Rule Mining to Identify Critical Demographic Variables Influencing the Degree of Burnout in A Regional Teaching Hospital

The True Cost of the Burnt Out Physician. Lisa Ellis, MD, FACP Chief Medical Officer- VCU Health Ambulatory Clinics

Chandni Dalia Gillian Colville Kirsty Abbas Joe Brierley Great Ormond St 2013

Physician Health and Well-being

Journal Club. Medical Education Interest Group. Format of Morbidity and Mortality Conference to Optimize Learning, Assessment and Patient Safety.

INTERVENTIONS FOR DOCTORS IN DIFFICULTY

Burnout in ICU caregivers: A multicenter study of factors associated to centers

Establishing Work-Life Balance to Keep Health Care Safe DR. MUNIDASA WINSLOW

PREVALENCE AND LEVELS OF BURNOUT AMONG NURSES IN HOSPITAL RAJA PEREMPUAN ZAINAB II KOTA BHARU, KELANTAN

Two Surgeon Couples. Chip Foley Laurel Rice. R. Scott Jones, MD

Dignity & Compassion in Care

Prevalence of Stress and Coping Mechanism Among Staff Nurses of Intensive Care Unit in a Selected Hospital

PARTICIPANT HANDOUTS INSTITUTIONAL STRATEGIES FOR PROMOTING RESILIENCE AND REDUCING BURNOUT

Just Culture. The single greatest impediment to error prevention in the medical industry is that we punish people for making mistakes.

Workshop Framework: Pathways

This webinar is hosted by Kathie Madonna Swift, MS, RDN, LDN, Food As Medicine Education Director for the Center for Mind- Body Medicine, presented

MEETING THE CHALLENGE OF BURNOUT. Christina Maslach, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley

Self-Care for Nurses: Staying in Balance

Rapid Intervention Service Kenora (RISK) Table Report May May 2017

STRESS AMONG DOCTORS IN MALAYSIA

Family Physician Well-Being: Update for the North Dakota AFP

Physician Wellness and Burnout

Patient Safety in Neurosurgery and Neurology. Andrea Halliday, M.D. Oregon Neurosurgery Specialists

Building Teams and Preventing Burnout:

UNIVERSITY OF SAN FRANCISCO DEAN OF THE SCHOOL OF NURSING POSITION DESCRIPTION

Nursing Mission, Philosophy, Curriculum Framework and Program Outcomes

Building a Comprehensive Approach to Wellness in the Residency

The original publication is available at at:

ORIGINAL INVESTIGATION. Burnout and Satisfaction With Work-Life Balance Among US Physicians Relative to the General US Population

Culture / Climate. 2-4 Mission command fosters a culture of trust,

Stress-Busting Program. An Evidence-Based Program for Family Caregivers

Positive Rounding in Health Care Work Settings. J. Bryan Sexton, PhD Kathryn C. Adair, PhD

Moral Distress and Burnout: Clinicians

03/24/2017. Measuring What Matters to Improve the Patient Experience. Building Compassion Into Everyday Practice

Walking the Walk Individual Creative Tools for Transforming Compassion Fatigue & Vicarious Trauma

DRAFT Optimal Care Pathway

Oncology Professional Burnout

Impaired Medical Staff Policy

TeamSTEPPS TM National Implementation

PHYSICIAN BURNOUT. Friday, April 15, 2016 Dr. Clare Hawkins Dr. Carolyn Eaton

A division of Workplace Behavioral Solutions, Inc

From Conflict to Curiosity A Framework for Promoting Interprofessional Collaboration

NUR 211 HEALTH CARE CONCEPTS

American Medical Association Journal of Ethics

NURS 147A NURSING PRACTICUM PSYCHIATRIC/MENTAL HEALTH NURSING CLINICAL EVALUATION CRITERIA. SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY School of Nursing

NOVA SCOTIA DIETETIC ASSOCIATION CODE OF ETHICS FOR PROFESSIONAL DIETITIANS

Enhancing Caregiver Resilience The Role of Staff Support

Being a doctor and staying a person April, 24&25th Paris

WHOLE HEALTH: CHANGE THE CONVERSATION. Clinician Self-Care: You in the Center of the Circle of Health Educational Overview

TOPIC 9 - THE SPECIALIST PALLIATIVE CARE TEAM (MDT)

Syndrome Burnout. Syndrome Burnout Download or Read Online ebook syndrome burnout in PDF Format From The Best User Guide Database

FOSTER STUDENT SUCCESS

Transcription:

ARE PALLIATIVE CARE PROVIDERS: ON FIRE OR BURNED OUT? Burnout happens to highly motivated and committed professionals the type of people who choose to go into hospice and palliative care. Eric Widera, MD Director of Hospice and Palliative Care at San Francisco VAMC

OBJECTIVES What is Burnout? Define burnout and describe its domains Discuss prevalence of burnout among palliative care providers and other physicians Review the professional and personal consequences of burnout Discuss strategies for preventing and combating burnout Syndrome of depersonalization, emotional exhaustion, and low personal accomplishment leading to decreased effectiveness at work Maslach Burnout Inventory Developed 1980, validated over last 30 years 22 item survey evaluates the 3 domains of burn-out 3 Sub-Scales: Depersonalization, Emotional Exhaustion and Low Personal Accomplishment Respondents rate frequency on 7 point Likert scale Normative national samples of like professionals 3 Stages of Burnout Emotional Exhaustion 1 st response to excessive work demands Characterized by feelings of being overwhelmed, overloaded, overworked and trapped Depersonalization Response to emotional exhaustion Defensive coping strategy Excessive detachment Personal Accomplishment Response to / result of continued depersonalization Decline in one s feelings of competence and successful achievement

Burnout Defined Burnout is the index of the dislocation between what people are and what they have to do. It represents an erosion in value, dignity, spirit, and will an erosion of the human soul. It is a malady that spreads gradually and continuously over time, putting people into a downward spiral from which it s hard to recover. Study group: sample of physicians from all disciplines from American Association Physician Masterfile Control group: Representative sample of US population aged 22-65 Of 814,022 US physicians, 7288 responded (0.9%) Maslach and Leiter (1997) OVERALL BURNOUT RATE = 45% Shanafelt et al.

Shanafelt et al. Shanafelt et al.

N = 360 nurses Why palliative care nurses have lower burnout scores than other nurses: these professionals have chosen on their own initiative a unit / service where they enjoy providing care, where they feel useful to patients and families and where they carry out consistent and valued teamwork. N=73 N=156 N=37

Professional Consequences of Burnout Perceived Errors Reported Error last 3 months 9% Medical Errors: Definition 1 : A commission or omission with potentially negative consequences for the patient that would have been judged wrong by skilled and knowledgeable peers at the time it occurred, independent of whether there were any negative consequences 1 JAMA 265:2089 Distinct from complications Greatest contributing factor Lapse judgment 32% A system issue 15% Degree of stress/burnout 13% Lapse concentration 13% Fatigue 7% Lack of knowledge 5% Other 16%

Emotional Exhaustion is Associated with Increased Medical Errors Burnout Medical Errors Depersonalization is Associated with Increased Medical Errors Personal Accomplishment & Medical Errors 4% Personal Accomplishment Medical Errors

Burnout Independently Increases the Risk of Medical Error 2-Fold Burnout Medical Errors Substance Abuse Personal Consequences of Burnout Approximately 15% of all physicians will be impaired at some time in their career and unable to meet professional responsibilities because of mental illness, alcoholism or drug dependency Boisaubin and Levine: Am J Med Sci 2001;322:31-36. Alcohol abuse in American College of Surgeons Survey: Male surgeons: 13.8% Female surgeons: 25.4% Oreskovich MR, Kaups KA, Balch CM, et al. The prevalence of substance use disorders among American surgeons. Arch Surg. 2012.

Strategies for Prevention and Treatment of Burnout WHO HOW WHEN Prevention Responsibility of all physicians and of the healthcare organizations in which they work Explicit promotion of physician well-being Physicians should be guided --from the earliest years of training-- to cultivate methods of personal renewal, emotional selfawareness, connection with social support systems, and a sense of mastery and meaning in their work Spickard A, Gabbard G, Christensen JF. Mid-career burnout in generalist and specialist physicians: definitions, risk factors and prevention. JAMA 288:1447-50. 2002 Five-Step Process to Personal and Professional Wellness: 1) Identifying core values 2) Career shaping/optimization 3) Identification and management of practice-specific stressors 4) Achieving balance between personal and professional goals 5) Nurturing personal wellness strategies Shanafelt. Ann. Surgical Oncology, Feb 2008

Step 1: Identifying Core Values 1)What are my greatest priorities in life? 2) Do I have adequate balance between my personal and professional lives? 3) If I could relive the past year, what would I spend more time doing? What would I spend less time doing? 4) What would I like my life to be like in 10 years? Shanafelt. Ann. Surgical Oncology, Feb 2008 Be guided by a compass, not a clock Step 2:Career Shaping / Optimization Each clinician must continuously map their career pathway integrate personal and professional goals Step 3: Identification and Management of Practice-Specific Stressors OR Partnering Delegating Additional training Talk to mentors Balch CM and Copeland E. Annals of Surgical Oncology 14(11):3029 3032. 2007

Step 4: Achieving Balance Between Personal and Professional Goals Recognize the inherent tradeoffs of decisions consider both personal and professional accomplishments when evaluating overall success Step 4: Achieving Balance Between Personal and Professional Goals Time away from work should be more than simply a chance to rest for another work day Shanafelt. Ann. Surgical Oncology, Feb 2008 Step 5: Nurturing Personal Wellness Strategies The best prevention for burnout is to actively nurture and protect personal and professional well-being on all levels: physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual Practical Advice for Palliative Care Providers Debriefing session to discuss difficult cases Self-awareness Exercise: increases good hormone, burns off stress Accommodate need for time off without creating more stress for rest of team Promote strong teamwork Teach good communication skills Add variety into job so it isn t all patient care Emphasize life/work balance Spickard A, Gabbard G, Christensen JF. JAMA 288:1447-50. 2002

Looking Out for Each Other We assume our colleagues are in good health, and as such frequently ignore the early warning signs of impairment or the significance of disruptive behavior patterns We need to recognize and manage impaired and disruptive behavior in a far more rigorous manner than we have in the past. Let us all strive to take very good care of each other. Anthony D. Whittemore MD Presidential Address American Surgical Association April 23, 2009 Summary Burnout is common among palliative medicine providers = 62% There are serious professional and personal consequences of burnout Burnout can be both prevented and treated through active recognition and continuous personal selfevaluation PALLIATIVE CARE PROVIDERS: ON FIRE OR BURNED OUT? Bridget N. Fahy, MD, FACS bfahy@salud.unm.edu University of New Mexico Palliative Care Update 28 October 2016