- This members-only benefit offers something for everyone
- Take a strategic approach to Medicare Advantage records requests
- How to launch a successful career in optometry
- A voice for independent doctors
- Are you prepared?
- How to fill your staffing needs
- The latest on AI and optometry
- More courses, more uses, more impact: Why more AOA member doctors, staff are turning to AOA EyeLearn
- Master paraoptometric certification exam prep with AOA’s study resources
- 5 things every office needs to practice full-scope optometry
- Why thriving practices are prioritizing retirement plans
- What happened to the FTC’s noncompete ban?
- Keeping your practice (and finances) safe
- Is your exam chair ADA compliant?
- 2.9% Medicare cut, broadly panned, looms over 2025 as advocates press Congress
- How to navigate political conversations in your practice
- Making the grade
- Does your malpractice insurance provider measure up?
- The power of delegation
- New technologies shaping optometry’s future
- How AOAExcel makes your life easier
- Next-gen optometry’s focus on independent practice
- Inferiority complexity?
- Is your staff connected? How peer connections benefit practices
- Protecting patient privacy when a clinical observer visits
- Does your practice do in-house billing? Here’s something to know
- Where to start? The tools and resources to leave a positive impact on your patients and community
- AOA boosts support for optometrists rocked by Change Healthcare cyberattack
- Be aware of new classification of employee vs. independent contractor from labor department
- Why optometrists love the AOA Business Card
- Paraoptometric Month
- Patient intake coding for medical diagnoses
- Set your practice up for success
- New federal Corporate Transparency Act
- How to compete with online sellers
- CMS finalizes 2024 physician fee schedule: AOA’s 8 takeaways for optometry
- How do you measure success in your practice?
- 4 tips to elevate the profession and educate the public
- Now we’re talking: Communicating with the public
- Level up your optometric surgical team: AOA launches surgical assistant coursework
- 4 essential personal financial tools for optometrists
- Coding for orthoptic training
- New remote testing option for paraoptometric certification saves time, distance
- Testing 1, 2, 3 … paraoptometric exam handbook, resources for certification testing
- 6 things every hiring practice owner should include in a career center listing
- Now we’re talking: Patient communication
- AOA, leading schools organize to safeguard and expand optometry’s independence
- Co-managed care rife with success stories for patients, doctors
- 3 ways to grow careers and practices at Optometry’s Meeting® 2023
- Why disability insurance is crucial
- Now we’re talking: Interprofessional communication
- Build your practice and protect the planet
- You’ve been served—now what? Where ethical intersects legal
- DEA’s new opioid training mandate: What you need to know
- How to handle bad reviews and ratings
- How the updated position statement can help guide telemedicine in optometry
- 3 questions to ask your malpractice insurance agent
- Optometry’s ‘medical’ eye care opportunity a boon for patients, coordinated care
- AOA Antitrust Compliance Policy
- How the AOA Business Card can benefit your practice
- Combatting inflation
- How to earn an MBA while practicing
- AOA’s new Center for Independent Practice to amplify members-only resources for practice success
- Window Tinting
- The most important thing to know about retirement savings planning
- bolster your cybersecurity
- Identity Theft
- How the HIPAA Privacy Rule applies in a public health emergency
- Partners in care
- 4 tips for handling payer clawbacks: What the experts say
- When patients defect: A case study in emotional intelligence
- A career choice
- Be proactive: Identifying improper sales programs, financial incentives
- Scope of practice and malpractice insurance
- website ADA compliance
- Which retirement plan is right for you
- AOA practice success initiative can help with payer issues
- The most important questions to ask about disability insurance
- audio-only telehealth
- A case study in professionalism
- How to eliminate bias in the exam
- Keeping the practice’s mental health top of mind
- Managing expectations Telemedicines next step
- Optometrys Meeting Surgical Saturday
- 5 ways AOA membership can bring your practice success
- 6 ways to make a job posting pop
- The impact of paraoptometric certification
- AOA EyeLearn revamp improves accessibility of CE resource
- Good faith estimate requirement takes effect
- Optimize your student loan repayment strategy
- How to speak the universal language of care
- How to Obtain Hospital Privileges
- 4 common misconceptions about life insurance
- The privileges of providing care
- How team learning improves doctor-staff coordination
- Pandemic savings strategies
- doctor-patient-communication
- AOA 2021 Virtual Learning Livecast opens for registration
- Virtual interview tips for employers and applicants
- Paraoptometric Exam Materials & Certification
- Keeping the medicine in telemedicine
- Know your options
- Business transition tips for buying or selling
- The wrong patient communication plan could be costly
- New must have resource by AOA for MIPS providers
- AOA faults Ophthalmology journal MIPS study
- Doctors find lessons and success in applying for lifeline PPP loans
- AOA MORE takes yearlong pause
- New rules ahead for patient access to electronic health records
- 7 things to know to protect your future
- PPP Loan Tax Implications
- AOA offers CE-eligible webinar-paraoptometric certification
- 8 lessons the COVID-19 pandemic has taught us
- talking politics keep peace in the practice
- Selling your practice to a private equity firm
- paraoptometric certification
- Life Insurance Awareness Month
- Members support AOA during COVID-19
- VLL courses debut on AOA professional development hub
- Why back to school eye exams are crucial this year
- Protection check-in
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- How to turn your patients into brand ambassadors
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- Communication key unlocking patients virus fear
- lessons from phase one reopening practices
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- How to reduce your carbon footprint
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- AOAExcel GPO Contact Lenses optical products
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Physician burnout improving, still high comparatively
February 26, 2019
Physician burnout may be improving in part due to interventional efforts—or flat out attrition—yet more can be done to address burnout and the AOA offers resources.
Satisfactory work-life balance remains a challenge for America's doctors compared to the general workforce, researchers say, but at least levels of outright physician burnout seem to be improving.
Published in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings, the new study found satisfaction with both work-life integration and burnout among U.S. physicians improved between 2014 and 2017, with few variations by specialty; however, both remained markedly higher than the overall U.S. working population. Researchers believe such trends could signify physicians' eventual adjustment to ill-reputed health IT changes or heightened awareness of the toxic effects of burnout.
"This is good news," says Lotte Dyrbye, M.D., Mayo Clinic researcher and senior author of the report, in a news release. "It shows that burnout is being addressed nationally and programs are having some impact."
A chronic state of emotional, physical or mental exhaustion, burnout can have significant health consequences that can lead to fatigue and irritability, or even high blood pressure and substance misuse. Particularly, physician burnout made headlines in recent years, often attributed to a shifting focus from direct patient care to an emphasis on electronic recording and reporting. But countless factors play into physician burnout as evidenced by the latest research from the Mayo Clinic, American Medical Association and Stanford University.
The results are in
Per the results of a nationwide physician survey in 2017-and compared to a similar 2011 survey-researchers found that 60% of physicians feel their work schedule hinders family or personal time, compared to only 40% of the general U.S. workforce. Likewise, nearly 44% of physicians report feeling burned out as compared to only 28% of the general workforce.
However, those numbers are still better than how physicians responded in 2014. Then, about 59% felt work impeded their family or personal time and about 54% reported feeling burned out.
Independently, being a woman and working more hours per week were associated with higher rates of burnout and lower satisfaction with work-life integration, while practicing in certain specialties was also associated with burnout. For example, "emergency medicine," "OB/GYN" and "family medicine" practitioners were most likely to report burnout, while "ophthalmology" fell near the least likely to report burnout.
So why are things getting better? Researchers note 2014 may have been "a particularly challenging time" as hospitals and practices consolidated, EHR use became far more widespread, and administrative burdens increased. Now, three years later, physicians either adapted to those circumstances or left their profession entirely.
"Many organizations have also made substantive efforts to improve the efficiency of the practice environment through better team-based care, documentation assistance and streamlined workflows," the study notes. "These and other efforts to improve physician well-being have proven to be efficacious and should be recognized as potential contributors to the favorable trend."
Although optometry wasn't one of the 20 specialties included in the study, the profession often holds a distinction for being among the "best jobs" due to good work-life balance and an average stress level. That said, each practice setting is unique and physician burnout can take a costly toll no matter where it strikes.
Strategies to manage stress
The AOA's Ethics Forum, an online resource for AOA members' quandaries about common ethical challenges in optometric practice, presented physician burnout as its first case study. Titled, "The Modern Practice and Optometrist Burnout," the case study introduces burnout as an ethical dilemma that affects patient care.
Citing a chapter of An Optometrist's Guide to Clinical Ethics, written by Michael Larkin, O.D., authors note several self-reflection questions to gauge personal stress:
- Am I providing quality care as I have increased my patient load?
- Have I reached the limit of my own mental or physical capacity, increasing the risk that I might make errors in diagnosis or treatment?
- Am I becoming unhappy with myself, my patients or my profession because I feel overworked or burned out?
"Answering 'yes' to even one question should be cause to begin to address the issues causing stress or even burnout," the case study notes.
"Burned out or not, we have standards for the care we know we should be providing."
Beyond the case study, the Ethics Forum offers six takeaways to help manage stress, including:
- Manage your time efficiently. Be organized, schedule realistically and do not overcommit yourself. Set priorities and boundaries, and maintain these limits while learning to say, "no."
- Anticipate, prepare for situations. This goes for both at work and home. Don't spend time trying to do things "the way it's always been done" or finding the "perfect" way. Look for options, set realistic expectations of yourself and accept that good enough is good enough.
- Create a financial plan. Stick to wise principles, reduce debt and save. Being financially overcommitted is the second-most common reason that physicians do not make changes to decrease their levels of stress.
- Leave work at work. Don't take it home-define when and where you will work and stick to it. Give your family your full, undivided attention when you are with them.
- Care for yourself. Take care of yourself by scheduling regular breaks, leisure activities and vacations. Eat properly, get enough sleep and stay physically active, too. Time for yourself can be an investment that allows you to be more readily available for all your other responsibilities. Look for, and enjoy, humor on a regular basis to bring fun to work.
- Find a mentor. Share concerns with trusted colleagues and ask for help if needed. Develop a support system and have at least one good friend who you can confide in and rely on to help.