Physician Burnout-Evidence That Leadership Behaviors Make A Difference: A Cross-Sectional Survey of an Academic Medical Center

Hu, James S.; Phillips, Jennifer; Wee, Choo Phei; Pangaro, Louis N.

Physician Burnout-Evidence That Leadership Behaviors Make A Difference: A Cross-Sectional Survey of an Academic Medical Center

Hu, James S.; Phillips, Jennifer; Wee, Choo Phei; Pangaro, Louis N.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: High rates of physician burnout are well documented in the USA. Identifying beneficial leadership behaviors as an organizational approach to mitigating burnout can lead to improved wellness in the physicians that they lead; however, few studies have examined which leadership behaviors are beneficial and which may be detrimental. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This survey study of academic medical center physicians and their physician leaders assessed the correlation between burnout and leadership behaviors. Data were analyzed for the strength of correlation between scores for leadership behaviors and self-reported physician burnout with analysis of variance by sex, time from training, specialty, and age. RESULTS: Of 1,145 physicians surveyed, 305 returned surveys. Among the respondents, 45% were female, 25% were 56 years or older, and 57% self-identified as practitioners of medicine or medicine subspecialties. Two transformational leadership categories of behaviors (idealized influence behaviors and individualized consideration) and one transactional leadership behavior category (contingent reward) correlated favorably with all domains of burnout (P < .0001). Conversely, two transactional leadership categories of burnout (management by exception passive and laissez-faire) correlated unfavorably with all burnout domains. CONCLUSIONS: Organizational interventions are needed to improve burnout in physicians. Adopting favorable leadership behaviors while avoiding unfavorable leadership behaviors can improve burnout in those physicians being led. These findings could inform the conceptual basis of future physician leadership training programs as transactional leadership behaviors also have an impact on physician wellness.

This resource is found in our Actionable Strategies for Health Organizations: Strengthening Leadership.

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Military Medicine
2022
Profession(s)
Physicians
Topic(s)
Burnout
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Nonexperimental / Observational Study
Action Strategy Area(s)
Leadership
Setting(s)
Academic
Academic Role(s)
Faculty and Staff