Shorter rotations in intensive care units mitigate burnout among physicians
Nearly half of the 10,000 critical care physicians practicing in the U.S. reported symptoms of severe burnout.
Shortening the length of rotations in a medical intensive care unit from the traditional 14-consecutive day schedule to only seven days helps mitigate burnout among critical care physicians, according to a new Penn Medicine pilot study.
Published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, the research speaks to the efficacy of a truncated rotation in reducing the rate of burnout among critical care physicians.
The team found the shorter rotations not only led to lower burnout rates -- by as much as 41 percent -- but the change also resulted in increased job fulfillment.
Work-related burnout, characterized by emotional or physical exhaustion, as well as feeling cynical or detached, is common among physicians -- particularly intensivists, or critical care physicians, who care for critically ill patients. Nearly half of the 10,000 critical care physicians practicing in the U.S. reported symptoms of severe burnout, which can lead to compassion fatigue, decreased quality of care and job turnover.
WHAT'S THE IMPACT
In May 2018, Penn Medicine launched a pilot initiative across four critical care rotations, spanning the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, to identify effective strategies to mitigate burnout and maximize fulfillment. The team, which had found high rates of burnout among intensivists at the end of 14-day rotations, tested a strategy proposed by the Critical Care Societies Collaborative that called for limiting the maximum number of days worked consecutively.
As a part of the pilot, intensivists in one unit, the Founders 9 MICU at HUP, had the option to attend for the traditional 14-day rotation or change their schedule to a seven-day rotation. Rotations in two other units were capped at seven consecutive days, while intensivists in the fourth unit worked a two-week rotation, with one weekend off.
From May 2018 to February 2019, the team administered more than 180 surveys to 29 physicians at different points throughout the rotations, including on day seven of a 14-day rotation and between clinical rotations.
They found burnout and fulfillment varied by the clinical rotation and length of rotation. For example, intensivists in the Founders 9 MICU, a 24-bed unit staffed by two critical care physicians, fellows and internal medicine residents, responded with 61 percent burnout and 47 percent fulfillment rates. Meanwhile, the intensivists working a seven-day rotation in the Donner 3 MICU at HUP -- an eight-bed unit, staffed by one critical care physician and two advanced practice providers -- responded with a 24 percent burnout and 76 percent fulfillment rates.
THE LARGER TREND
Burnout has been a growing problem for physicians for years now, driven in part by factors such as temperamental electronic health records and a shortage of skilled professionals relative to the number of patients. But this year, some good news finally emerged: The epidemic levels of physicians reporting burnout dropped modestly in 2017.
Burnout decreased and satisfaction with work-life integration improved between 2014 and 2017. Still, levels of burnout remain markedly higher than in other fields. About 44 percent of physicians reported at least one symptom of burnout, and only about 43 percent reported satisfaction with their work-life integration, which was less than in 2011.
ON THE RECORD
"While our main focus was measuring burnout and fulfillment rates, we also wanted to ensure the shorter rotations did not negatively impact our ability to educate the next wave of physicians who are training here," said author Meeta Prasad Kerlin, MD, MSCE, an assistant professor of Medicine and associate fellowship program director in the division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care. "Based on feedback from our critical care physicians, fellows, and residents, we found the shorter rotations may have, in fact, led to better education, as faculty felt they could be more engaged and energetic."
Twitter: @JELagasse
Email the writer: jeff.lagasse@himssmedia.com