Skip to main content

Rekindle the Flame - Burnout



Rekindle The Flame

I suspect most of you go through the motions of work-related duties. Feeling fully exhausted to the point of no return. Some might say it’s normal or just apart of having a stressful job, but the real concern should be about improving your health. 

Human services tend to have a high degree of burnout due to the toll it takes on individuals providing such intimate care. As caregivers it’s easy to care for everyone but yourself. In 2015, the Mayo Clinic conducted a study reveling that more than half of American physicians now have at least one sign of burnout, a nine percent increase from three years ago. 

When working within health care, underlying factors like time constraints, lack of control over work processes and scheduling, and conflicting roles and relationship with leadership all lead to burnout cases. Money can't fix the emotional aspect that comes with such an intimate profession. You need to believe your work is fulfilling and has meaning. 
There are moments when all the stars a line. When everything seems as it should be. Your life seems to have sorted itself out. It's not like all our problems go away. It's just all the problems are suddenly manageable. It feels so good and you wonder if it's real. If I've learned anything, it's very real it just might not last.

Burnout can be prevented if caught early and warning signs are acknowledged. Burnout matters because it doesn’t only affect the professionals it also impacts the organization as a whole in providing health care services. Everyday health care organizations across the world save patients’ lives but in order to continue to do so, the focus needs to be on caregivers to make sure their physical, emotional, and spiritual needs are met. Remember the passion you had going into the field of medicine. The goal moving forward is to find your WHY!

Comments

  1. This was really fascinating to read! I was not surprised that many American physicians experience burnout, but I was surprised that the percentage of physicians experiencing burnout has gone up so much! Do you think the larger culture of the American workforce has contributed to this increase in burnout?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

I Made $75,000 a Year Working From My Couch

HONEY THE KIDS KEEP MESSING WITH MY VINTAGE ROTARY TELEPHONE! In the age of interconnectedness, most people confront the idea of working from home only when they decide to wade through the forest of comments on their Great Aunt’s Breitbart repost and happen across a random comment from a sketchy dude with two friends and no profile photo on his account. I don’t know if you’re aware, but you can make millions from the comfort of your own couch/home/home office/bed/wherever you want — probably. All you have to do is click a variety of totally safe links that will definitely not infect your computer/phone and send whatever remaining data Facebook doesn’t have on you straight to Mark Zuckerberg’s evil laboratory that we all know he has hidden underneath whatever California McMansion he is hiding from Congress in this week. TOTALLY LEGIT!!! But for real, many Americans are in fact making at l...

The Name of the Game is Leadership

Men's Soccer Coach Ben Schneweis talking to one of his players. Photo by: Cobber SID      In today’s day and age, sports hold a huge importance to multiple people across the globe, whether it’s watching the Olympic Games to playing at your collegiate institution. But, of course, everyone has to start out somewhere as to why they either fell in or out of love with their said-sport(s). Sometimes it’s the influence of friends; sometimes it’s the influence of family; sometimes it’s the influence of the media. Many times, though, it’s the influence that coaches have on their players. This has a lot to do with their style of leadership and how they form and maintain relationships with their athletes.      According to an article written by Callow and colleagues in 2009, transformational leadership “involves the building of relationships with followers based on three different types of exchanges: personal, emotional, and inspirational.” In recent years, ins...

Workplace Bullying and How Administrations Are Contributing To It

After listening to a RN with 35 years of experience talk year after year about fellow employees, I got the chance to see if what they were saying was happening elsewhere. Through the years I noticed common themes of harassment/bullying, new nurses transferring or going back to school almost immediately, and new nurses quitting all together and finding a new occupation. It seemed over the years that the later topics were becoming more and more common. Through my research I found right away that the nursing turnover rate has grown by 2.2% just since 2016. The rate now sits at 16.8%. Due to the high turnover, researchers are expecting to have a nursing shortage double of what we have experienced before just by 2025. About 30%-50% of RNs change positions or leave within their first three years. In an aging society were we depend so heavily on nurses, it is important that we figure out what exactly is causing this rising trend. There is substantial research that points to horizont...