Shannon Muchmore@stmuchmore Aug. 8, 2019
Dive Brief:
·
Nearly 80% of primary care physicians and 57% of specialists
reported some level of burnout in a recent online survey of more than 600
physicians conducted by InCrowd, a vendor of market research for life sciences
companies.
·
Burnout rates were highest among younger physicians — 70% for
physicians in their 30s and 74% for physicians in their 40s — while rates
dropped with successively older groups of physicians. Survey respondents
between the ages of 70 and 80 had the lowest rate of 22%.
·
A minority, or 25%, of survey respondents, said their work sites
effectively address burnout, citing initiatives that improve workflow and
reduce administrative burden (46%), provide flexible scheduling and/or generous
vacation time (45%) and support wellness (41%).
Dive Insight:
Provider
burnout has been a long running challenge health systems and clinicians, with
the potential to harm patient care and provider well-being.
It also
can be costly. For example, a recent study published
in the Annals of Internal Medicine calculated annual burnout costs between $2.6
billion and $6.3 billion, including costs from staff turnover, lower
productivity and other factors.
Numerous
factors are at play: upheavals in practice structures and routines through
consolidation, heavy documentation and charting workloads, the prevalence of
EHRs, and policy and regulatory requirements.
The new
study calculates burnout rates that are higher than some other recent studies,
although finding consistency among research, often with different
methodologies, is difficult. A Medscape study in early 2018 put the figure at
almost two-thirds, while another Medscape study published earlier this
year found that 44% of
physicians experienced burnout.
Meanwhile,
the American Medical Association released a study this year finding 44% of U.S.
physicians reported at least one symptom of burnout in 2017, down from 54% in
2014 and 46% in 2011. The study, published in
Mayo Clinical Proceedings, included results from more than 5,000 physicians.
To
arrive at its estimates, InCrowd fielded a five-minute, online survey in June.
Survey respondents were nearly equally divided among primary care physicians
(51%) and specialists (49%), with 72% working in private practices and 28% in
hospitals.
Among
the 75% of physicians who said their organizations do not effectively address
burnout, 53% cited the lack of action and acknowledgement of the problem.
Smaller percentages mentioned other factors, including minimal resources to
offload tasks or provide support (15%), a cultural emphasis on the bottom line
over well-being (15%), and burdensome workloads and understaffing (11%).
The
government and industry are beginning to address the problem.
For
example, CMS in June called on the public to
submit suggestions for how to reduce the administrative burden on providers.
Agency officials said they are particularly interested in ideas targeting
reporting and documentation requirements, prior authorizations and enrollment and
eligibility determinations.
The
current RFI follows one CMS issued in 2017. So far, the agency has addressed
83% of the "actionable items" submitted in the 2017 RFI, which
generated feedback from more than 2,000 stakeholders in 23 states, CMS said.
Some
health systems also are developing initiatives to address burnout, such as
hiring chief wellness officers or reducing the number of alarms and messages
generated by EHRs.
No comments:
Post a Comment