Association of clerical burden and EHR frustration with burnout and career intentions among physician faculty in an urban academic health system
Ripp J, Pietrzak R, de Guillebon E, Peccoralo L. Association of clerical burden and EHR frustration with burnout and career intentions among physician faculty in an urban academic health system. International Journal Of Medical Informatics 2024, 195: 105740. PMID: 39644795, DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2024.105740.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchElectronic health recordsClerical burdenAssociated with greater likelihoodPhysician facultyHealth systemEHR timeUrban academic health systemClerical timeGreater likelihoodOdds of burnoutAssociated with lower oddsAcademic health systemMultivariate logistic regression analysisHealth recordsLogistic regression analysisHospital-based departmentsInstitution-wide surveyLower oddsHealthy workforceHealthcare systemDemographic characteristicsNew York CityBurnoutCareer intentionsPhysiciansAssociation of gender-based discrimination and burnout among faculty in an urban academic medical center
Peccoralo L, de Guillebon E, Clifton E, He C, Kaplan S, Deshpande R, Kaplan C, Pietrzak R, Charney D, Ripp J. Association of gender-based discrimination and burnout among faculty in an urban academic medical center. Work 2024 DOI: 10.1177/10519815241290607.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAssociated with burnoutUrban academic medical centerAssociated with depressive symptomsCross-sectional surveyAcademic medical centerConclusions BurnoutBackground BurnoutGender-based discriminationReduce burnoutProfessional satisfactionMental healthUrban hospitalsWomen physiciansDepressive symptomsImpact burnoutRates of menIncreased burnoutLeadership scoresProfessional characteristicsWork life integrationBurnoutMedical CenterPhysiciansSurvey instrumentWomenAssociation of Psychological Safety with Burnout and Intent to Leave Among Physician Faculty in New York City
de Guillebon E, He C, Akhtar S, Pietrzak R, Ripp J, Peccoralo L. Association of Psychological Safety with Burnout and Intent to Leave Among Physician Faculty in New York City. Journal Of General Internal Medicine 2024, 40: 361-367. PMID: 39354250, PMCID: PMC11803037, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-024-09034-9.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPhysician facultyAssociated with lower oddsAssociated with lower scoresAmbulatory care departmentPrevalence of PSClinical faculty membersStandard deviation unit increasePsychologically safe environmentMultivariate logistic regression analysisFaculty physiciansLogistic regression analysisHealth systemSeven-itemInstitution-wide surveyLower oddsConclusionsA majorityCare departmentNew York CityBurnoutPhysiciansSafe environmentFemale genderOrganization QuestionnaireLower scoresOccupational characteristics
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