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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 5/2018

01-05-2018 | Editorial

Should all ICU clinicians regularly be tested for burnout? Yes

Authors: Laurent Papazian, Aude Sylvestre, Margaret Herridge

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 5/2018

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Excerpt

Intensive care unit (ICU) admissions are unplanned emergencies where ICU professionals are required to rapidly attend to complicated situations with uncertain outcomes. The interprofessional team is immersed in a complex milieu of heightened stress and intense emotion as they engage in a medical crisis with the patient and family. This is further compounded by a work environment that has become increasingly technical with its demand of extended skills in advanced life-sustaining therapies. A growing body of evidence suggests that burnout among ICU nurses [1] and ICU physicians [2] is the direct consequence of this demanding and inexorably high-stress work environment. Severe burnout-related symptoms are prevalent and have been reported in one-third of ICU nursing staff and one-half of ICU intensivists [13]. Burnout in healthcare workers may profoundly affect their well-being and the quality of professional care they provide and, therefore, may represent an important, and potentially modifiable, patient safety concern. Indeed, burnout has been identified as a key determinant of medical error in physicians [4] and has become a priority issue in our specialty and focus of a recent joint statement of the Critical Care Societies Collaborative [3]. …
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Metadata
Title
Should all ICU clinicians regularly be tested for burnout? Yes
Authors
Laurent Papazian
Aude Sylvestre
Margaret Herridge
Publication date
01-05-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 5/2018
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-018-5094-z

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