4 results match your criteria: "Department of Medicine and Institute for Professional Worklife[Affiliation]"
J Healthc Manag
May 2024
Department of Medicine and Institute for Professional Worklife, Hennepin Healthcare and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Goal: This study was developed to explicate underlying organizational factors contributing to the deterioration of primary care clinicians' mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: Using data from the Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good's national survey of primary care clinicians from March 2020 to March 2022, a multidisciplinary team analyzed more than 11,150 open-ended comments.
Diagnosis (Berl)
August 2023
Harvard Medical School, Center for Primary Care, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA.
Objectives: To understand the relationship between stressful work environments and patient care by assessing work conditions, burnout, and elements of the diagnostic process.
Methods: Notes and transcripts of audiotaped encounters were assessed for verbal and written documentation related to psychosocial data, differential diagnosis, acknowledgement of uncertainty, and other diagnosis-relevant contextual elements using 5-point Likert scales in seven primary care physicians (PCPs) and 28 patients in urgent care settings. Encounter time spent vs time needed (time pressure) was collected from time stamps and clinician surveys.
Mo Med
September 2022
Department of Medicine and Institute for Professional Worklife, Hennepin Healthcare System, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Rates of burnout among clinicians have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 (COVID)pandemic. A survey of Missouri primary care professionals at federally qualified health centers was conducted during a COVID surge in August 2021 to assess burnout, stress, and job satisfaction as well as if respondents had sought assistance for burnout or attended resiliency training. Despite respondents reporting rates of burnout (56%) that exceed those reported nationally (48%), only 17% sought help for burnout.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
August 2022
American Medical Association, Chicago, IL, USA.