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The healthcare landscape continues to evolve, and factors like an aging population, [9] physician shortage, change from volume-based care to value-based care, [10] Patients as customer [11] are some drivers of the change. These changes are happening rapidly and concurrently with a consequent adverse impact on physician burnout.
A couple articles mention how nursing burnout could happen from the demand of being compliant with the technology used in the healthcare setting: The Electronic Medical Record (EMR) is becoming much more popular to use for health professionals; but this is removing health professionals from the direct patient care areas.
A confluence of issues have put strains on health care systems amid the ongoing pandemic, and they could lead to increased costs in 2022, according to Moody's.
Common mental health conditions include PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder), depression, anxiety disorders, and stress disorders. [64] These mental side effects caused difficulties amongst health care workers not only during the pandemic, but also after the pandemic was considered over. Healthcare workers experienced tremendous amounts of ...
The new Impact Wellbeing program provides leadership resources on addressing burnout and encourages hospitals to administer well-being questionnaires. New CDC program hopes to combat health care ...
Burnout was another major contributor to these professionals who had a higher risk of suffering from Compassion Fatigue. Burnout is a prevalent and critical contemporary problem that can be categorized as suffering from emotional exhaustion, de-personalization, and a low sense of personal accomplishment. [44]
Doctors and other healthcare providers also struggle with interviewing difficult or uncooperative patients, as well as giving undesirable medical news to patients and their families. [ 11 ] The field has placed increasing emphasis on working towards sharing the power in the relationship, as well as training the doctor to empower the patient to ...
The topical scope is broad covering such areas as the epidemiology of inequities, structural racism, social determinants of health, quality, costs, regulation, legislation, and disease prevention. Articles primarily take the form of scholarly research, as well as policy analyses and book reviews.