基于哥本哈根倦怠量表和压力超载量表的海湾合作委员会四国居民的倦怠与压力

Feras H. Abuzeyad, Luma Bashmi, Leena Alqasem, Fawaz Al-Refae, A. Al Balushi, Basim Al Saywid, R. Hashem, A. Ali, Abdulla Almusalam, Priya Das, Stephanie Hsu
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引用次数: 1

摘要

医生的职业倦怠和压力会对医疗服务产生相应的影响,是医疗差错和医疗质量下降的主要原因。本研究首次结合哥本哈根倦怠量表(CBI)和压力超载量表-短表(SOS-S)作为评估工具,评估四个海湾合作委员会(GCC)国家医疗居民的倦怠和压力水平的患病率和相关变量。采用在线调查设计的横断面定量研究方法。这项在线调查是在四个海湾合作委员会国家(沙特阿拉伯、科威特、巴林和阿曼)的三级保健中心培训的二年级及以上住院医生中进行的。采用方便抽样的方法,招募符合条件的居民(n = 16686)。在2886名受访者中,有996人因信息不完整而被排除在外。数据于2020年9月13日至2020年11月15日收集。1,890名住院医师中,女性961人(50.8%),平均(SD)年龄为29.5(3.2)岁。个人倦怠患病率最高,其次是工作倦怠和患者相关倦怠(分别为98.4%、97.8%和79.3%)。阿拉伯和科威特理事会成员在所有领域的职业倦怠率最高。压力超载得分很高,51.6%的居民处于疾病高风险,沙特委员会居民最有可能处于高风险,阿曼医学专业委员会居民处于低风险。职业倦怠的预测因素包括:没有参加健康计划(p = 0.000)、更长的轮班时间(p = 0.000)、高度的个人脆弱性(p = 0.000)和离职的意图(p = 0.05)。我们的研究结果表明,海湾合作委员会居民的倦怠和压力率很高,这表明居民提供最高质量的医疗保健可能存在重大问题。需要进一步的研究来评估住院医师健康干预措施的有效性,以解决这个问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Burnout and Stress Among Residents in Four Gulf Cooperation Council Countries Using the Copenhagen Burnout Inventory and Stress Overload Scale-Short Form
Physician burnout and stress can have consequential effects on healthcare services and are a leading cause for medical errors and lower quality of care. This is the first study to assess the prevalence rates and associated variables for burnout and stress levels of medical residents in four Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries by combining the Copenhagen Burnout Inventory (CBI) and Stress Overload Scale-Short Form (SOS-S) as assessment tools. A cross-sectional, quantitative research method design using an online survey. This online survey was distributed to second year and above medical residents training in tertiary healthcare centres in four GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman). Eligible residents (n = 16,686) were recruited via convenience sampling. Out of 2,886 respondents, 996 responses were excluded due to incomplete information. The data was collected from 13th September 2020 to 15th November 2020. Of 1,890 included medical residents, 961 (50.8%) were females, and the mean (SD) age was 29.5 (3.2) years old. Personal burnout prevalence rates were the highest, followed by work-related and patient-related burnout (98.4%, 97.8%, and 79.3%, respectively). Arab and Kuwait Board residents had the highest rates of burnout across all domains. Stress overload scores were high with 51.6% of residents at high risk for illness, with Saudi Board residents most likely to be at high risk and Oman Medical Specialty Board residents at low risk. Burnout predictors included: no access to a wellness programme (p = 0.000), longer shifts (p = 0.000), high personal vulnerability (p = 0.000), and intention to leave (p = 0.05). Our findings show that burnout and stress rates are high for GCC residents, suggesting a significant problem for residents to provide the highest quality of healthcare possible. Further research is needed to evaluate the efficacy of residency wellness interventions to address this issue.
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