Physicians as shock absorbers: The system of structural factors driving burnout and dissatisfaction in medicine

被引:13
作者
Jenkins, Tania M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Sociol, 155 Pauli Murray Hall CB 3210 UNC CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
关键词
JOB-SATISFACTION; CHANGING NATURE; HEALTH; ENVIRONMENT; RESILIENCE; STUDENTS; DOCTOR; US;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116311
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
American physicians disproportionately suffer from burnout. Despite calls for systemic solutions, however, few studies have actually examined how 'the system' works-i.e. how structural factors intersect in real-time as a system to shape wellbeing. I borrow a systems theoretical approach, which explicitly recognizes the dynamic relationships and interdependencies between different actors and factors in healthcare, to examine how structural factors work together to shape physicians' wellbeing. Drawing on an eight-month ethnography in a pediatrics clinic, I show how respondents experienced pressures from multiple structural levels: societal (including broader social inequality and changing doctor-patient relationships); organizational (centralized decisionmaking, economic pressures, and unresponsive leadership); and professional (specialty cultures and unhealthy norms). I find that individual physicians effectively served as shock absorbers, routinely absorbing countless, interconnected structural demands ("shocks") and converting them into competent medical care, at significant cost to their mental health. In so doing, I intervene in sociological debates about the broader fate of the medical profession and conclude that if medicine remains resilient against threats to its dominance, it may well be at the expense of individual physicians' mental wellbeing.
引用
收藏
页数:9
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