The effects of working and living conditions of physicians on burnout level and sleep quality

BACKGROUNDBurnout is a multidimensional syndrome associated with intense working conditions and negative psychosocial factors in physicians. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of living and working conditions of physicians on burnout level and sleep quality in Turkey. METHODSIn...

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Published inMedicina del lavoro Vol. 112; no. 5; pp. 346 - 359
Main Authors Hacimusalar, Yunus, Misir, Emre, Civan Kahve, Aybeniz, Demir Hacimusalar, Goknur, Guclu, Muhammed Alperen, Karaaslan, Ozgul
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Italy Mattioli 1885 srl 28.10.2021
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Summary:BACKGROUNDBurnout is a multidimensional syndrome associated with intense working conditions and negative psychosocial factors in physicians. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of living and working conditions of physicians on burnout level and sleep quality in Turkey. METHODSIn this internet-based questionnaire study, 1053 physicians [General Practitioners (n=233); Basic Medical Sciences (n=26); Internal Medical Sciences (n=530), and Surgery Sciences (n=264)] were included in the study, filling the forms consisting of study conditions, Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questions. RESULTSNegative occupational factors such as physicians having a night shift, high number of patients who are cared for daily, short examination period, low financial gain, exposure to violence, and mobbing were associated with poor sleep quality and burnout. Factors such as being subjected to violence, mobbing, and age are predictive of increasing burnout in women. Working on night shifts or being on-call were associated with all aspects of burnout. The proportion of those with poor sleep quality was significantly higher in those working night shifts (74.6%) than those working daytime shifts (67.2%) and those who were exposed to violence (75.1%) compared to those who were not exposed to violence (43.2%) (p=0.013, p<0.001, respectively). CONCLUSIONSImpaired sleep quality, violence, mobbing, young age, excessive night shifts, short examination period, and low income may play a role in physician burnout. Our study data suggest that it is important to improve physicians' unfavorable working conditions and to prevent violence against burnout.
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ISSN:0025-7818
2532-1080
DOI:10.23749/mdl.v112i5.11268