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- Christine C Welles, Allison Tong, Elinor Brereton, John F Steiner, Matthew K Wynia, Neil R Powe, Michel Chonchol, Romana Hasnain-Wynia, and Lilia Cervantes.
- Department of Medicine, University of Colorado, Leprino Building, 4th floor, 12401 East 17th Avenue, Mailstop F-782, Aurora, CO, 80045, USA. christine.welles@cuanschutz.edu.
- J Gen Intern Med. 2023 May 1; 38 (6): 146814751468-1475.
BackgroundBurnout among clinicians is common and can undermine quality of care, patient outcomes, and workforce preservation, but sources of burnout or protective factors unique to clinicians working in safety-net settings are less well understood. Understanding these clinician experiences may inform interventions to reduce burnout.ObjectiveTo describe clinician perspectives on sources of burnout in a safety-net healthcare system.DesignSemi-structured interviews were conducted with clinicians from multiple disciplines who provided care at a safety-net healthcare system from October 2018 to January 2019. Transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis.ParticipantsForty clinicians (25 female and 15 male; mean [SD] age, 41 [9.1]) participated, including physicians, social workers, advanced practice providers, nurses, psychologists, physical and occupational therapists, and other healthcare professionals.Main Outcomes And MeasuresThemes and subthemes that reflected clinician experiences, burnout, and workload expectations.Key ResultsFive themes emerged: limited resources (entrenched social injustices, brokenness of the US healthcare system, precarious discharge options, and "revolving door" readmissions), barriers to building trust with patients (chasm of communication, addressing fear and mistrust, and being exposed to threats), administrative requirements (criticism hampering meaningful care, assuming extra workloads, bureaucratic burden), compassion fatigue (confronting traumatic situations, persistent worry about patient safety and welfare, witnessing mistreatment and stigmatization, overextending and overinvesting, withdrawing and shutting down, blaming self and career crisis), and advocacy as a counterbalance to burnout (solidarity when helping underserved communities, fervent advocacy, and patient gratitude).ConclusionsAmong clinicians who provide care in a safety-net healthcare system, sources of burnout included limited resources, barriers to building trust with patients, administrative requirements, and compassion fatigue, but clinicians remained driven by their desire to advocate for patients. Policy-level interventions which increase funding to safety-net healthcare systems to bolster existing resources and staffing, create peer-support and wellness programs, and support advocacy efforts may mitigate burnout.© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.
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