Career Satisfaction and Burnout among American Muslim Physicians.

Sondos Al Sad, Aasim I Padela
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Abstract

Background  Career satisfaction and burnout among physicians are important to study because they impact healthcare quality, outcomes, and physicians' well-being. Relationships between religiosity and these constructs are underexplored, and Muslim American physicians are an understudied population. Methods  To explore relationships between career satisfaction, burnout, and callousness and Muslim physician characteristics, a questionnaire including measures of religiosity, career satisfaction, burnout, callousness, and sociodemographic characteristics was mailed to a random sample of Islamic Medical Association of North America members. Statistical relationships were explored using chi-squared tests and logistic regression models. Results  There were 255 respondents (41% response rate) with a mean age of 52 years. Most (70%) were male, South Asian (70%), and immigrated to the United States as adults (65%). Nearly all (89%) considered Islam the most or very important part of their life, and 85% reported being somewhat or very satisfied with their career. Multivariate models revealed that workplace accommodation of religious identity is the strongest predictor of career satisfaction (odds ratio [OR]: 2.69, p  = 0.015) and that respondents who considered religious practice to be the most important part of their lives had higher odds of being satisfied with their career (OR: 2.21, p  = 0.049) and lower odds of burnout (OR: 0.51, p  = 0.016). Participants who felt that their religion negatively influenced their relationships with colleagues had higher odds of callousness (OR: 2.25, p  = 0.003). Conclusions  For Muslim physicians, holding their religion to be the most important part of their life positively associates with career satisfaction and lower odds of burnout and callousness. Critically, perceptions that one's workplace accommodates a physician's religious identity associate strongly with career satisfaction. In this era of attention to physician well-being, the importance of religiosity and religious identity accommodations to positive career outcomes deserves focused policy attention.

美国穆斯林医生的职业满意度和职业倦怠。
背景医生的职业满意度和职业倦怠非常重要,因为它们会影响医疗质量、结果和医生的幸福感。宗教信仰与这些观念之间的关系尚未得到充分的探讨,而美国穆斯林医生是一个尚未得到充分研究的群体。方法采用随机抽样的方式,向北美伊斯兰医学协会会员邮寄一份包含宗教信仰、职业满意度、职业倦怠、冷酷和社会人口学特征的问卷,探讨职业满意度、职业倦怠和冷酷与穆斯林医生特征之间的关系。采用卡方检验和逻辑回归模型探讨统计关系。结果调查对象255人,有效率41%,平均年龄52岁。大多数(70%)是男性,南亚人(70%),成年后移民到美国(65%)。几乎所有人(89%)都认为伊斯兰教是他们生活中最重要的部分,85%的人表示对自己的职业有些满意或非常满意。多变量模型显示,工作场所对宗教认同的适应是职业满意度的最强预测因子(比值比[OR]: 2.69, p = 0.015),认为宗教活动是其生活中最重要的一部分的受访者对职业满意度的几率更高(OR: 2.21, p = 0.049),倦怠的几率更低(OR: 0.51, p = 0.016)。认为他们的宗教信仰对他们与同事的关系有负面影响的参与者有更高的冷酷几率(OR: 2.25, p = 0.003)。结论对穆斯林医生来说,将宗教信仰作为生活中最重要的一部分,与职业满意度和较低的倦怠和麻木的几率呈正相关。重要的是,人们认为一个人的工作场所能容纳医生的宗教身份,这与职业满意度密切相关。在这个关注医生福祉的时代,宗教信仰和宗教身份对积极职业成果的重要性值得关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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