Survey of physicians, nurses highlights burnout and things that could improve hospital job conditions.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted existing problems in the workplace culture of hospitals.
Those conditions are not getting better, and that’s at the hospitals considered good places to work.
A new study surveyed thousands of physicians and nurses at dozens of top hospitals across the country and found: “The hospital workforce remains in disarray despite the ebbing of the COVID-19 pandemic.”
“Physicians and nurses largely agree about what hospital management could do to address their burnout, job dissatisfaction, and plans to leave their current jobs; they want improved staffing, modern working conditions in which they can spend more time in direct patient care, greater control over their workloads and work schedules, and a higher priority on patient safety,” lead author Linda H. Aiken, PhD, said in a news release. Aiken is professor of nursing and sociology, founding director of the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, and senior fellow of the Leonard Davis Institute for Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania.
Nurse staffing is reaching critical mass, with 45% of physicians and 87% of nurses describing it as very important for their own mental health and well-being. The study found they also want health breaks without interruption and less time spent on paperwork and documentation.
“Many clinicians are downright hostile to programs – like resilience training – that are designed to adapt them to poor work conditions,” Aiken said. “Clinicians want the working conditions improved.”
The survey results aligned with previous studies that have catalogued burnout and workplace dissatisfaction among health care workers.
Regarding patient safety and quality of care, 33% of physicians and 39% of nurses said they felt mistakes were held against them. Physicians (29%) outpaced nurses (23%) in not feeling free to question decision of actions of authorities of their facilities.
Regarding quality of care, 9% of physicians and 16% of nurses rated it as poor or fair, although “in some hospitals those percentages rose to more than one-quarter of physicians and half of nurses.” Up to 75% of physicians and nurses “in some hospitals were not confident that patients could manage their care after discharge,” the study said.
“The culture of patient safety is not usually discussed in the context of clinician well-being; however, our study found it to be significantly associated with physician dissatisfaction and intent to leave and with all nurse outcomes,” the study said.
Regarding management, 42% of physicians and 47% of nurses said they were not confident management would act to resolve problems in patient care that clinicians identify.
But doctors and nurses seem to get along: 94% of physicians and 89% of nurses said they had a good working relationship.
The original investigation, “Physician and Nurse Well-Being and Preferred Interventions to Address Burnout in Hospital Practice – Factors Associated With Turnover, Outcomes, and Patient Safety,” was published by JAMA Health Forum.
The electronic surveys went out as part of a multisite collaborative study in 2021. Surveys were sent out to clinicians at 60 hospitals, averaging 100 physicians and 262 registered nurses per hospital, with response rates of 22% for doctors and 27% for nurses. The hospitals were selected based on voluntary credentials by the Magnet Recognition Program, which the American Nurses Credentialing Center awards based on nursing excellence and quality of health care.
This article was published by our sister publication Medical Economics.
Contemporary OB/GYN Senior Editor Angie DeRosa gets insight on the current state of COVID-19 from Christina Han, MD, division director of maternal-fetal medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and member of its COVID-19 task force. Han is an active member of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and discusses the issues on behalf of SMFM.
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