Addressing Palliative Care Clinician Burnout in Organizations: A Workforce Necessity, an Ethical Imperative
- PMID: 28196784
- PMCID: PMC5474199
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.01.007
Addressing Palliative Care Clinician Burnout in Organizations: A Workforce Necessity, an Ethical Imperative
Abstract
Clinician burnout reduces the capacity for providers and health systems to deliver timely, high quality, patient-centered care and increases the risk that clinicians will leave practice. This is especially problematic in hospice and palliative care: patients are often frail, elderly, vulnerable, and complex; access to care is often outstripped by need; and demand for clinical experts will increase as palliative care further integrates into usual care. Efforts to mitigate and prevent burnout currently focus on individual clinicians. However, analysis of the problem of burnout should be expanded to include both individual- and systems-level factors as well as solutions; comprehensive interventions must address both. As a society, we hold organizations responsible for acting ethically, especially when it relates to deployment and protection of valuable and constrained resources. We should similarly hold organizations responsible for being ethical stewards of the resource of highly trained and talented clinicians through comprehensive programs to address burnout.
Keywords: Burnout; ethics; hospice; moral distress; palliative care.
Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Comment in
-
I Never Thought "That Person" Could Be Me ….J Pain Symptom Manage. 2017 Jul;54(1):e3-e5. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.02.002. Epub 2017 Feb 24. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2017. PMID: 28238933 No abstract available.
References
-
- Hughes MT, Smith TJ. The growth of palliative care in the United States. Annu Rev Public Health. 2014;35:459–75. - PubMed
-
- Lupu D, American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Workforce Task Force Estimate of current hospice and palliative medicine physician workforce shortage. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2010 Dec;40(6):899–911. - PubMed
-
- National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization NHPCO’s Facts and Figures: Hospice Care in America; 2014 edition [Internet] 2014 Available from: http://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/files/public/Statistics_Research/2014....
-
- Center to Advance Palliative Care Growth of Palliative Care in U.S. Hospitals 2015 Snapshot (2000 – 2013) [Internet] [cited 2015 May 4]. Available from: https://www.capc.org/media/filer_public/c5/af/c5afb02e-5e12-47f0-954a-ee....
-
- Kamal AH, Bull J, Wolf S, Samsa GP, Swetz K, Myers E, et al. Characterizing the Hospice and Palliative Care Workforce in the U.S.: Clinician Demographics and Professional Responsibilities. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2015 Nov 6; - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
Research Materials
