Alcohol consumption and drinking habits among Finnish doctors were studied as part of a survey of stress and burnout. A questionnaire containing 99 questions or groups of questions was sent to all 3496 practising doctors aged under 66 randomly selected from the registry of the Finnish Medical Association. Altogether 2671 doctors (76%) responded; this sample was representative of the Finnish medical profession. The average weekly consumption of alcohol during the past year and various aspects ofdrinking behaviour were assessed, and the presence or absence of symptoms and diseases often encountered among heavy drinkers and addicts was determined. The data were analysed separately for men and women, for those aged -40 and >40, and for the men with high and low alcohol consumption and with high and low scores on the index of drinking habits. Selected variables related to work, stress, and coping were correlated with alcohol consumption and drinking behaviour.The median consumption of alcohol among male doctors was 4876 g (6.2 litres) and among female doctors 2226 g (2.8 litres) of absolute alcohol per person per year and was higher in those aged over 40. Beer was most commonly drunk by men and wine by women. Increased alcohol consumption was associated with older age, disappointment with career, heavy smoking, use of benzodiazepines, stress and burnout symptoms, suicidal thoughts, general dissatisfaction, and diseases related to alcohol. Drinking habits were heavier among doctors working in community health centres, those taking long sick leaves, younger doctors disappointed with their careers or the atmosphere at work, and older doctors immersed in their work.Alcohol consumption among doctors seems to be higher than that ofthe general population in Finland, and heavy drinking seems to be associated with stress and burnout. this group, giving 3496 subjects. A questionnaire containing 99 questions or groups ofquestions was sent with a letter describing the aims of the study to all doctors selected to participate. Total anonymity was assured, and the questionnaires did not contain any questions or codes that could possibly identify the responder.Average weekly consumption of alcohol during the past year was assessed separately for beer, wine, and spirits. Each was scaled according to the number of bottles or glasses consumed, and these scales were transformed into grams of absolute alcohol. The amount of alcohol consumed does not, however, give a full picture of drinking behaviour: the manner in which alcohol is used is another important aspect. Scores for 12 questions measuring various aspects of drinking behaviour were summed for each subject to obtain an index of drinking habits (
Nationwide use of e-prescriptions was not more common than in 2002. Several countries had piloted or were piloting projects on e-prescriptions. Interoperability of different systems is a challenge to which EU-funded projects might offer a solution.
The aim of this study was to analyse the influence of gender and children on physicians' stress and burnout and to obtain information on the compromises physicians make between family and work. The study was based on a nationwide survey of 3313 Finnish physicians. The results showed that work was the commonest reason for stress for both male and female physicians. If physicians had children, combining work and family was the commonest reason for stress among the women, but work still remained the commonest reason for stress among the men. The female physicians had made compromises between family and work more often than the male physicians (limited the number of children, delayed having children, given up postgraduate or continuing medical education, worked part‐time because of family, and given up a job because of a spouse's need to move). The female physicians—with or without children—were more likely than the male physicians to experience severe or moderate exhaustion and less likely than the male physicians to experience cynicism as components of burnout. Among both genders of physicians, having children was associated with less cynicism and reduced personal accomplishment, but the children did not affect exhaustion. In conclusion, having children is associated with a lower level of some burnout symptoms. Additional studies are needed to explain the health effects of work–family balance for physicians. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Six patients undergoing elective femoral osteotomy were subjected to a series of intravenous glucose tolerance tests and plasma insulin determinations in a study of the way in which a standard operation affects carbohydrate metabolism. The glucose tolerance of all patients assumed a diabetic pattern; this was already observable in the test made on admission to the operating theater and was still evident during the last test on the second postoperative day. The changes were most profound during and four hours after the operation. Insulin secretion was suppressed on the day of operation, but exceeded preoperative values in the postoperative period. Urinary excretion of catecholamines was determined in 4 patients; there was no correlation between the degree of insulin suppression and the catecholamine output. The assumption that the hyperglycemic response and insulin suppression are mediated along splanchnic neural pathways was not confirmed in a quadriplegic patient, who responded to an intravenous glucose tolerance test soon after the injury with hyperglycemia, insulin suppression and a low catecholamine output. It is concluded that the hyperglycemia and insulin suppression observed after trauma represent a complex and purposeful metabolic response, in which several causative factors are involved.
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