Clinician Burnout Associated With Sex, Clinician Type, Work Culture, and Use of Electronic Health Records.

dc.contributor.author

McPeek-Hinz, Eugenia

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Boazak, Mina

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Sexton, J Bryan

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Adair, Kathryn C

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West, Vivian

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Goldstein, Benjamin A

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Alphin, Robert S

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Idris, Sherif

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Hammond, W Ed

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Hwang, Shelley E

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Bae, Jonathan

dc.date.accessioned

2021-09-01T13:59:24Z

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2021-09-01T13:59:24Z

dc.date.issued

2021-04

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2021-09-01T13:59:24Z

dc.description.abstract

Importance

Electronic health records (EHRs) are considered a potentially significant contributor to clinician burnout.

Objective

To describe the association of EHR usage, sex, and work culture with burnout for 3 types of clinicians at an academic medical institution.

Design, setting, and participants

This cross-sectional study of 1310 clinicians at a large tertiary care academic medical center analyzed EHR usage metrics for the month of April 2019 with results from a well-being survey from May 2019. Participants included attending physicians, advanced practice providers (APPs), and house staff from various specialties. Data were analyzed between March 2020 and February 2021.

Exposures

Clinician demographic characteristics, EHR metadata, and an institution-wide survey.

Main outcomes and measures

Study metrics included clinician demographic data, burnout score, well-being measures, and EHR usage metadata.

Results

Of the 1310 clinicians analyzed, 542 (41.4%) were men (mean [SD] age, 47.3 [11.6] years; 448 [82.7%] White clinicians, 52 [9.6%] Asian clinicians, and 21 [3.9%] Black clinicians) and 768 (58.6%) were women (mean [SD] age, 42.6 [10.3] years; 573 [74.6%] White clinicians, 105 [13.7%] Asian clinicians, and 50 [6.5%] Black clinicians). Women reported more burnout (survey score ≥50: women, 423 [52.0%] vs men, 258 [47.6%]; P = .008) overall. No significant differences in EHR usage were found by sex for multiple metrics of time in the EHR, metrics of volume of clinical encounters, or differences in products of clinical care. Multivariate analysis of burnout revealed that work culture domains were significantly associated with self-reported results for commitment (odds ratio [OR], 0.542; 95% CI, 0.427-0.688; P < .001) and work-life balance (OR, 0.643; 95% CI, 0.559-0.739; P < .001). Clinician sex significantly contributed to burnout, with women having a greater likelihood of burnout compared with men (OR, 1.33; 95% CI, 1.01-1.75; P = .04). An increased number of days spent using the EHR system was associated with less likelihood of burnout (OR, 0.966; 95% CI, 0.937-0.996; P = .03). Overall, EHR metrics accounted for 1.3% of model variance (P = .001) compared with work culture accounting for 17.6% of variance (P < .001).

Conclusions and relevance

In this cross-sectional study, sex-based differences in EHR usage and burnout were found in clinicians. These results also suggest that local work culture factors may contribute more to burnout than metrics of EHR usage.
dc.identifier

2778909

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2574-3805

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2574-3805

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23676

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

dc.relation.ispartof

JAMA network open

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10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.5686

dc.title

Clinician Burnout Associated With Sex, Clinician Type, Work Culture, and Use of Electronic Health Records.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Sexton, J Bryan|0000-0002-0578-2924

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Adair, Kathryn C|0000-0003-4886-0002

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Goldstein, Benjamin A|0000-0001-5261-3632

duke.contributor.orcid

Hammond, W Ed|0000-0003-2395-7676

pubs.begin-page

e215686

pubs.issue

4

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School of Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, General Psychiatry

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Duke

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics

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Population Health Sciences

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Institutes and Centers

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Basic Science Departments

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Medicine

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Staff

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

4

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