2019
DOI: 10.1370/afm.2338
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Burnout and Health Care Workforce Turnover

Abstract: PURPOSE Levels of burnout among primary care clinicians and staff are alarmingly high, and there is widespread belief that burnout and lack of employee engagement contribute to high turnover of the workforce. Scant research evidence exists to support this assertion, however. METHODSWe conducted a longitudinal cohort study using survey data on burnout and employee engagement collected in 2013 and 2014 from 740 primary care clinicians and staff in 2 San Francisco health systems, matched to employment roster data… Show more

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Cited by 244 publications
(208 citation statements)
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“…For example, our measures of practice environment were not exhaustive and we lacked data on staff turnover and engagement, which are associated with burnout. 31,32 One possible mechanism for hospitalowned and federal practices to have higher rates of burnout may be from lack of clinician control over support staff, which could lead to poor team function and lengthy times to hire new clinicians. Practice ownership was similarly associated with burnout in bivariate correlations, but lost significance when controlling for other characteristics.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, our measures of practice environment were not exhaustive and we lacked data on staff turnover and engagement, which are associated with burnout. 31,32 One possible mechanism for hospitalowned and federal practices to have higher rates of burnout may be from lack of clinician control over support staff, which could lead to poor team function and lengthy times to hire new clinicians. Practice ownership was similarly associated with burnout in bivariate correlations, but lost significance when controlling for other characteristics.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The association between burnout and patient satisfaction and intent to leave has been reported in non-pediatric nurse populations as well [5,6,115,[134][135][136]. It is likely that as nurses become increasingly burned out their satisfaction with their jobs decreases and their desire to leave their position increases.…”
Section: Work Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Causes of burnout include: increased clinical demands, inadequate staffing patterns, decreased control, poorly functioning teams, role ambiguity, moral distress, reimbursement issues, decreased time with patients, difficulty balancing personal and professional lives, inefficiency of the electronic medical record and isolation. Burnout also contributes to increased medical errors, patient dissatisfaction, high turnover rates and substantial financial losses (Hall, Johnson, Watt, Tsipa, & O’Connor, ; Pereira‐Lima et al, ; Willard‐Grace et al, ). For every newly licensed registered nurse who leaves their job in the first year of practice, it costs the institution up to three times the nurse’s annual salary when factoring in the costs associated with recruitment, training and orientation (Unruh & Zhang, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%