Physician burnout a public health crisisincreased rate of burnout among physicians creating a public health crisis that “urgently demands action,” a recent report from the Harvard Global Health Institute concludes. The report cites existing research illustrating the prevalence of physician burnout. One study referenced, the 2018 Survey of America’s Physicians Practice Patterns and Perspectives, found that 78 percent of respondents experienced feelings of professional burnout, a 4 percent increase from the results of a 2016 survey conducted by the Physicians Foundation. Additionally, the report cites findings from the Mayo Clinic showing that physicians who experience burnout are more likely to reduce their work hours or leave the profession altogether. An estimate from the Department of Health and Human Services indicates that the United States will experience a shortage of 90,000 physicians by 2025. “The growth in poorly designed digital health records and quality metrics has required that physicians spend more and more time on tasks that don’t directly benefit patients, contributing to a growing epidemic of physician burnout,” study co-author Ashish Jha, a Veterans Administration physician and professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a Jan. 17 press release.
“If left unaddressed, the worsening crisis threatens to undermine the very provision of care, as well as eroding the mental health of physicians across the country,” the report states. |