• Mayo Clinic proceedings · May 2023

    Racial and Gender Differences in Medical Student Burnout: A 2021 National Survey.

    • Logan G Briggs, Grant J Riew, Nicole H Kim, Shani Aharon, Jacob A Klickstein, Amanda Q Cao, Chris Lites, Valentina Sedlacek, Michael W Seward, Derek R Soled, Kerri Palamara, and Medicine in Motion Writing Group.
    • Department of Urologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, AZ. Electronic address: loganbriggsMD@gmail.com.
    • Mayo Clin. Proc. 2023 May 1; 98 (5): 723735723-735.

    ObjectiveTo measure racial and gender differences in medical student burnout and identify possible contributing factors.Patients And MethodsElectronic surveys were distributed to medical students at 9 US medical schools from December 27, 2020, through January 17, 2021. Questions covered demographic characteristics, stressors contributing to burnout, and the 2-item Maslach Burnout Inventory.ResultsOf 5500 invited students, 1178 (21%) responded (mean age, 25.3 years; 61% identified as female). Fifty-seven percent of respondents identified as White, 26% as Asian, and 5% as Black. Overall, 75.6% of students met the criteria for burnout. Women reported more burnout (78% vs 72%; P=.049). There were no differences in burnout prevalence by race. Students commonly reported that lack of sleep (42%), decreased engagement in hobbies or self-care (41%), stress about grades (37%), feeling socially disconnected (36%), and lack of exercise (35%) contributed to burnout. Compared with students of other races, Black students reported that their feelings of burnout were affected significantly more by lack of sleep and poor diet, and Asian students more by stress about grades, residency, and publishing pressure (all P<.05). Female students were more affected than male students by stress about grades, poor diet, and feelings of social disconnectedness and inadequacy (all P<.05).ConclusionBurnout (75.6%) was higher than historical norms, and female students reported higher burnout than male students. There was no difference in burnout prevalence by race. There were racial and gender differences in self-identified contributors of burnout. Additional research is needed to confirm whether stressors were contributors to or consequences of burnout, as well as how to address them.Copyright © 2022 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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