AI Article Synopsis

  • * Out of 1,648 surveyed, 606 participants reported symptoms: 19% had depression, 16% had anxiety, and 17.7% experienced stress, with 63% showing signs of Burnout Syndrome.
  • * The findings indicate a strong connection between mental health symptoms and Burnout, suggesting a need for interventions to improve the well-being of medical trainees, which should be further studied in larger, ongoing research.

Article Abstract

Background: Several studies correlate medical residency with the occurrence of mental health disorders, Burnout Syndrome and quality of life impairment. It has been demonstrated that mental health disorders increase medical errors and lead to less effective patient care. Considering such context, this study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of anxiety, depression, stress and to identify its correlates with Burnout Syndrome and quality of life in a sample of medical residents and fellow physicians of the largest Brazilian academic health system.

Methods: In 2017, 1648 participants were voluntarily and anonymously surveyed online about demographic characteristics, Burnout Syndrome, mental symptoms, and quality of life measured by validated questionnaires. Responses were captured through REDCap platform and multivariate statistical analyses were performed with STATA 15.

Results: A total of 606 (36.8%) residents/fellows physicians completed the survey. Depression symptoms were present in 19%, anxiety symptoms in 16% and stress symptoms in 17.7% of the sample. Burnout Syndrome was present in 63% of the sample. Multivariate analysis showed a statistical significant positive correlation between Burnout Syndrome and depression, anxiety and stress symptoms and a negative correlation between mental symptoms and quality of life scores.

Conclusions: Mental health symptoms prevalence in this study is similar to other studies and their occurrence is positively correlated with Burnout Syndrome among medical residents/fellow physicians of the largest Brazilian academic health system. These results are relevant and must be confirmed by multicentric longitudinal studies. This study reinforces the importance of debating interventions to improve mental health among doctors in training.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6558838PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12909-019-1621-zDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

burnout syndrome
20
mental health
16
quality life
16
brazilian academic
12
academic health
12
depression anxiety
8
anxiety stress
8
medical residents
8
health system
8
health disorders
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!