Litcius/Paper detail

Beyond burnout: looking deeply into physician distress

Agnes Wong

2020Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Physician wellness is an important issue and a growing concern within the medical profession. Although "burnout" is a commonly used term to describe physician distress, it fails to capture the many aspects of medicine that negatively impact physician wellness and what physicians experience. In this article, I will explore the personal (unhealthy perfectionism, pathologic altruism, self-recrimination, and the pitfalls of success), interpersonal (empathic distress, moral suffering, bullying, and marginalization), and systemic (medical culture, workplace environment and burnout, and health care system) factors that act interdependently and synergistically to give rise to physician distress. This article is a call for an earnest discussion and for implementing changes by addressing and reconsidering the place of physician wellness in medical practice, education, and research on the one hand, and its impact on patients, families, and society on the other.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutDistressPersonal distressInterpersonal communicationAltruism (biology)PsychologyInterpersonal relationshipNursingMedicineSocial psychologyPsychotherapistClinical psychologyHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutInnovations in Medical EducationDiversity and Career in Medicine