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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 1/2022

01-01-2022 | Care | Original Research

Identifying and Prioritizing Workplace Climate Predictors of Burnout Among VHA Primary Care Physicians

Authors: Ryan Sterling, PhD, Seppo T. Rinne, MD, Ashok Reddy, MD, Megan Moldestad, MS, Peter Kaboli, MD, Christian D. Helfrich, PhD, Nora B. Henrikson, PhD, Karin M. Nelson, MD, Catherine Kaminetzky, MD, Edwin S. Wong, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Objective

Burnout, or job-related stress, affects more than half of all US physicians, with primary care physicians (PCPs) experiencing some of the highest rates in medicine. Our study analyzes national survey data to identify and prioritize workplace climate predictors of burnout among PCPs within a large integrated health system.

Design

Observational study of annual survey data from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) All Employee Survey (AES) for 2013–2017. AES response rate ranged from 56 to 60% during the study period. Independent and dependent variables were measured from separate random samples. In total, 8,456 individual-level responses among PCPs at 110 VHA practice sites were aggregated at the facility level by reporting year. We used the semi-automated LASSO procedure to identify workplace climate measures that were more influential in predicting burnout and assessed relative importance using the Shapely value decomposition.

Participants

VHA employees that self-identify as PCPs.

Main measures

Dependent variables included two dichotomous measures of burnout: emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. Independent measures included 30 survey measures related to dimensions of workplace climate (e.g., workload, leadership, satisfaction).

Results

We identified seven influential workplace climate predictors of emotional exhaustion and nine predictors of depersonalization. With few exceptions, higher agreement/satisfaction scores for predictors were associated with a lower likelihood of burnout. The majority of explained variation in emotional exhaustion was attributable to perceptions of workload (32.6%), organization satisfaction (28.2%), and organization support (19.4%). The majority of explained variation in depersonalization was attributable to workload (25.3%), organization satisfaction (22.9%), and connection to VHA mission (20.7%).

Conclusion

Identifying the relative importance of workplace climate is important for the allocation of health organization resources to mitigate and prevent burnout within the PCP workplace. In a context of limited resources, efforts to reduce perceived workload and improve organization satisfaction may represent the biggest leverage points for health organizations to address physician burnout.
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Metadata
Title
Identifying and Prioritizing Workplace Climate Predictors of Burnout Among VHA Primary Care Physicians
Authors
Ryan Sterling, PhD
Seppo T. Rinne, MD
Ashok Reddy, MD
Megan Moldestad, MS
Peter Kaboli, MD
Christian D. Helfrich, PhD
Nora B. Henrikson, PhD
Karin M. Nelson, MD
Catherine Kaminetzky, MD
Edwin S. Wong, PhD
Publication date
01-01-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 1/2022
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-021-07006-x

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