2021
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182111181
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The Impact of Psychological Interventions with Elements of Mindfulness (PIM) on Empathy, Well-Being, and Reduction of Burnout in Physicians: A Systematic Review

Abstract: Introduction: Physician’s burnout has been recognized as an increasing and significant work-related syndrome, described by the combination of emotional exhaustion (EE) and depersonalization (D), together with low personal accomplishment (PA). It has many negative consequences on personal, organizational, and patient care levels. This systematic review aimed to analyze research articles where psychological interventions with elements of mindfulness (PIMs) were used to support physicians in order to reduce burno… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“… Li et al (2020) listed a growing body of research on general negative impacts that COVID-19 posed on mental health but they highlighted that this academic literature mostly fell between the two camps of being either commentaries or cross-sectional studies. Linking the expanded requirement for mindfulness to COVID-19, whilst relying on pre-COVID research, is consistent with other laudable work which also acknowledges that the bona fide research prior to 2019 has relevance to the pandemic and post-pandemic era ( Tement et al, 2021 ; Marotta et al, 2022 ; Sampei et al, 2022 ). These writings also tacitly acknowledge the paucity of published work in the last 3 years that provide concurrent academic sources.…”
Section: Methodssupporting
confidence: 72%
“… Li et al (2020) listed a growing body of research on general negative impacts that COVID-19 posed on mental health but they highlighted that this academic literature mostly fell between the two camps of being either commentaries or cross-sectional studies. Linking the expanded requirement for mindfulness to COVID-19, whilst relying on pre-COVID research, is consistent with other laudable work which also acknowledges that the bona fide research prior to 2019 has relevance to the pandemic and post-pandemic era ( Tement et al, 2021 ; Marotta et al, 2022 ; Sampei et al, 2022 ). These writings also tacitly acknowledge the paucity of published work in the last 3 years that provide concurrent academic sources.…”
Section: Methodssupporting
confidence: 72%
“…The COVID19 pandemic exacerbated distress in healthcare workers and has been associated with dropout from training and reduction of work hours 11,12 , which ultimately impacts on the entire healthcare system. Hence, a need exists for interventions that can help promote well-being, especially for individuals training as medical scientists 13 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mindfulness skill refers to “paying attention in a specific way: intentional, present, and nonjudgmental” (Kabat‐Zinn, 2013), involving three related psychological skills: (a) deliberately focusing on the present (rather than letting the brain ruminate on the past or worry about the future); (b) perception of the situation and participation in clear conscious actions (not emotionally, automatically, or unconsciously); (c) experience every moment without bias to emotional reactions or psychological judgments (e.g., expectations, wishes or fears that may or may not be related to what happened) (Roeser et al, 2013). The mindfulness‐based intervention has been proven to alleviate the job burnout of medical staff, teachers, counselors, and other professionals (Luken & Sammons, 2016; Ramachandran et al, 2022; Tement et al, 2021), as well as students' learning burnout (Li et al, 2020; Wan, 2020). It was explained that, through mindfulness training, dispositional mindfulness, and psychological resilience could be improved simultaneously.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%