AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigated how the demanding work environment and burnout of cardiothoracic surgeons impact their spouses and significant others (SOs).
  • A survey sent to SOs revealed that a majority felt their surgeon partners' stress significantly influenced family life, with issues such as lack of time for family and intimacy being common.
  • The findings highlighted that family well-being is at risk, particularly when surgeons are early in their careers, work longer hours, or lack workplace support, pointing to the need for further research and potential solutions to address these challenges.

Article Abstract

Objectives: We aimed to evaluate how the current working climate of cardiothoracic surgery and burnout experienced by cardiothoracic surgeons influences their spouses and significant others (SOs).

Methods: A 33-question well-being survey was developed by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery Wellness Committee and distributed by e-mail to the SOs of cardiothoracic surgeons and to all surgeon registrants of the 2020 and 2021 American Association for Thoracic Surgery Annual Meetings with a request to share it with their SO. The 5-item Likert-scale survey questions were dichotomized, and associations were determined by χ or independent samples t tests, as appropriate.

Results: Responses from 238 SOs were analyzed. Sixty-six percent reported that the stress on their cardiothoracic surgeon partner had a moderate to severe influence on their family, and 63% reported that their partner's work demands didn't leave enough time for family. Fifty-one percent reported that their partner rarely had time for intimacy, 27% reported poor work-life balance, and 23% reported that interactions at home were usually or always not good-natured. SOs were most affected when their partner was <5 years out from training, worked in private vs academic practice, and worked longer hours. Having children, particularly younger than age 19 years, and a lack of workplace support resources further diminished well-being.

Conclusions: The current work culture of cardiothoracic surgeons adversely affects their SOs, and the risk for families is concerning. These data present a major area for exploration as we strive to understand and mitigate the factors that lead to burnout among cardiothoracic surgeons.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2023.04.008DOI Listing

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