Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience

Abstract Background Burnout is increasingly prevalent among general practitioners (GPs) in Hungary, which may lead to functional impairment and, subsequently, to poor quality of patient care. However, little is known about potential predictors of burnout among GPs. The aim of this study was to explo...

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Main Authors: Szilvia Adam, Andras Mohos, Laszlo Kalabay, Peter Torzsa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-018-0886-3
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spelling doaj-d36fc3ac7ad845e6a503a1dde62806012020-11-25T03:28:37ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962018-12-0119111010.1186/s12875-018-0886-3Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experienceSzilvia Adam0Andras Mohos1Laszlo Kalabay2Peter Torzsa3Institute of Behavioural Sciences, Semmelweis UniversityDepartment of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine ,University of SzegedDepartment of Family Medicine, Medical Faculty, Semmelweis UniversityDepartment of Family Medicine, Medical Faculty, Semmelweis UniversityAbstract Background Burnout is increasingly prevalent among general practitioners (GPs) in Hungary, which may lead to functional impairment and, subsequently, to poor quality of patient care. However, little is known about potential predictors of burnout among GPs. The aim of this study was to explore psychosocial correlates of burnout among GPs and residents in Hungary. Methods We collected socio-demographic and work-related data with self-administered questionnaires in a cross-sectional study among GPs (N = 196) and residents (N = 154). We assessed burnout with the Maslach Burnout Inventory Human Services Survey (MBI-HSS) and calculated the mean level of burnout and the proportion of physicians suffering from low, intermediate and high degree of burnout. To identify potential socio-demographic and work-related correlates of burnout among physicians, we determined Spearman’s and Mann-Whitney U correlation coefficients and conducted stepwise linear regression analyses. We deployed Mann-Whitney U test to explore gender disparity in the level of burnout between female and male physicians and between general practitioners and residents. Results The prevalence of moderate to high level emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation, and impaired personal accomplishment was 34.7, 33.5 and 67.8% as well as 41.0, 43.1, and 71.1% among GPs and residents, respectively. Residents reported significantly lower level of personal accomplishment vs GPs. We identified a significantly higher level of depersonalization among male physicians compared to female physicians. Age correlated negatively with emotional exhaustion and depersonalization and positively with personal accomplishment among GPs. Dependant care was positively associated with burnout among female GPs. Female residents were more likely to report depersonalization. High workload was positively correlated with depersonalization among female GPs. Younger age emerged as the strongest predictor of emotional exhaustion. Male gender and fewer years of experience predicted depersonalization best, and male gender showed a significant predictive relationship with low personal accomplishment. Conclusion We identified specific socio-demographic and work-related correlates of burnout, which may guide the development of specific and effective organizational decisions to attenuate occupational stress and subsequent burnout as well as functional impairment among GPs, and thus, may improve the quality of patient care.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-018-0886-3BurnoutGeneral practitionersResidentsGenderCorrelatesPredictors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Szilvia Adam
Andras Mohos
Laszlo Kalabay
Peter Torzsa
spellingShingle Szilvia Adam
Andras Mohos
Laszlo Kalabay
Peter Torzsa
Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
BMC Family Practice
Burnout
General practitioners
Residents
Gender
Correlates
Predictors
author_facet Szilvia Adam
Andras Mohos
Laszlo Kalabay
Peter Torzsa
author_sort Szilvia Adam
title Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
title_short Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
title_full Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
title_fullStr Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
title_full_unstemmed Potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in Hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
title_sort potential correlates of burnout among general practitioners and residents in hungary: the significant role of gender, age, dependant care and experience
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background Burnout is increasingly prevalent among general practitioners (GPs) in Hungary, which may lead to functional impairment and, subsequently, to poor quality of patient care. However, little is known about potential predictors of burnout among GPs. The aim of this study was to explore psychosocial correlates of burnout among GPs and residents in Hungary. Methods We collected socio-demographic and work-related data with self-administered questionnaires in a cross-sectional study among GPs (N = 196) and residents (N = 154). We assessed burnout with the Maslach Burnout Inventory Human Services Survey (MBI-HSS) and calculated the mean level of burnout and the proportion of physicians suffering from low, intermediate and high degree of burnout. To identify potential socio-demographic and work-related correlates of burnout among physicians, we determined Spearman’s and Mann-Whitney U correlation coefficients and conducted stepwise linear regression analyses. We deployed Mann-Whitney U test to explore gender disparity in the level of burnout between female and male physicians and between general practitioners and residents. Results The prevalence of moderate to high level emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation, and impaired personal accomplishment was 34.7, 33.5 and 67.8% as well as 41.0, 43.1, and 71.1% among GPs and residents, respectively. Residents reported significantly lower level of personal accomplishment vs GPs. We identified a significantly higher level of depersonalization among male physicians compared to female physicians. Age correlated negatively with emotional exhaustion and depersonalization and positively with personal accomplishment among GPs. Dependant care was positively associated with burnout among female GPs. Female residents were more likely to report depersonalization. High workload was positively correlated with depersonalization among female GPs. Younger age emerged as the strongest predictor of emotional exhaustion. Male gender and fewer years of experience predicted depersonalization best, and male gender showed a significant predictive relationship with low personal accomplishment. Conclusion We identified specific socio-demographic and work-related correlates of burnout, which may guide the development of specific and effective organizational decisions to attenuate occupational stress and subsequent burnout as well as functional impairment among GPs, and thus, may improve the quality of patient care.
topic Burnout
General practitioners
Residents
Gender
Correlates
Predictors
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-018-0886-3
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