Should patients
fire their doctors if they suspect burnout? In a recent PBS interview, Dr.
Noseworthy suggested patients should “change physicians” when faced with non-empathetic
doctors suffering from burnout. His
cavalier resolution to our occupational struggle feels like a betrayal, to both
his esteemed colleagues across the country and our profession. In
my opinion, firing your physician is a risky proposition in light of the
looming physician shortage. After all, a
bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
Burnout is
an overwhelming sense of disillusionment a physician experiences when the
practice of medicine holds no joy. It is
not a psychological problem, yet can lead to a downward spiral of
impairment. According to a recent
article in US
News, almost half of physicians have symptoms of burnout. Seven percent of
physicians aged 29-65 contemplated suicide in the last year. These
statistics are troubling on many levels.
Over half of current physicians
state if given the opportunity to choose again, they would not choose
medicine as a career. Why? Our once noble profession has lost its
magnificence in an explosion of technology, nonsensical regulations, and
increased clerical burden. According to
a study in the Annals
of Internal Medicine, for every one hour of patient contact, a physician
spends two hours doing administrative work.
Never-Had-a-Bad-Day-Noseworthy said, “EHR’s are not easy to use.” Why are physicians being required [forced] to
utilize useless technology if it does not reduce burnout while improving
efficiency and care quality?
Look, we sacrificed our youth seeking delayed
gratification that may never come; physicians have responsibility, but no
authority, and vast quantities of knowledge, yet no autonomy. Sadly, we have ceded it to arrogant administrators running amok in a system of unfettered capitalism. Regrettably, this oppression has taken a toll
on us all, patients included.
How did physician burnout become linked to increased
medical errors? A study examined the
relationship between the burnout experienced by surgeons and frequency of
medical errors. The more exhausted and
depersonalized your physician has become the greater your likelihood of
experiencing a medical error.
How common are these so-called medical errors? Last May, the British Medical Journal
released a study ranking medical errors as the third leading cause of death in
the U.S., after heart disease and cancer, killing 250,000 people a year.
From my perspective, an overwhelming workload also plays a significant
role. A recent study in JAMA found
increasing a nurses’ workload from four to six patients increases the death
rate by 14 percent, while going from six to eight patients is tied to a 31
percent increase in death rate. The
wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead, literally.
If a physician is suffering from burnout, let us
walk through the conversation Dr. Noseworthy is so naively proposing.
Patient: “Doc, You are not as empathetic as you used
to be. I am thinking about changing
physicians?”
Physician: “Well, what exactly is the problem?”
Patient: “Well you used to spend more time with me at
appointments and seemed to care.”
Physician: “I wish there was more time to talk. I sure
loved my job back then...” (Sigh. Continual tapping of computer keys heard in
the background while trying to seem empathetic.)
Valuing
the physician-patient relationship allows it to be a central transformative
therapeutic force. Obamacare expanded coverage for almost 20 million Americans
seemingly overnight. Patient volumes
doubled due to the unprecedented surge in insurance coverage? There were not enough physicians in reserve
to care for the overwhelming onslaught especially in underserved rural areas;
most of us on the front lines are drowning in paperwork, administrative and
regulatory burdens. Being a physician
under current circumstances is like trying to get a sip of water out of a fire
hose. Every physician in this country is
on the train barreling toward burnout.
Last week, I referred four different patients to
four different local pediatric specialists.
Three of those four physicians called to let me know they are retiring at
the end of the year. With all due
respect to Dr. Noseworthy, at the rate things are going, firing your physician
will land a patient in medical limbo until they can find a physician desperate
enough to accept them. This man is so out
of touch with reality outside the ivory tower, he is completely oblivious to
the larger implications of the looming physician shortage.
According
to the Association of American Medical Colleges report, the projected shortage will reach 85,000 physicians by
2020. In Will the Last Physician in America Please Turn Off the
Lights, three co-authors from Merritt, Hawkins
& Associates say the wait to see a physician will jump to three to four
months for a non-emergent visits, and it will cost two to three times what it
does now–whether you are insured or not. Guess what? I am already at the three
month mark for non-emergent appointments and struggling to keep up with the
growing patient demand.
Physicians are resilient to a fault, coupled with
stoic demeanors, inquisitive minds, and strongly empathetic natures, but we all
have our limits. Reducing burnout will only be feasible when we have more
independence over the particulars of our self-sacrificing occupation. If every physician in
this country insisted on caring for patients as we saw fit and refused to click
even one more box, a revolution
would ensue. We must stop “rolling over” when
asked to do more with fewer resources, reduced pay, and even less time. Physicians must put on their own oxygen masks
before helping others with theirs.
Despite
his insulting recommendation, Dr. Noseworthy might actually be on our side. “Physicians are highly dedicated
professionals, who are good people, but have been crushed [by the
system.]” Do not allow yourself to be
destroyed by a system we cannot control.
Take back medicine for yourself and your patients. Know your value. Do not bend to the demands of managers and
administrators; refuse to accept a workload that prohibits attaining
occupational jubilation and enlightenment.
There
is an impending crisis no one has foreseen; the winds are about to shift in our
direction. Rules of supply and demand are universal. Soon, it will be a
“physicians market”; we will cherry pick patients based on their having good
insurance, a healthy medical profile, and a pleasant demeanor.
Let us circle back to Dr. Noseworthy, “Change physicians. It is too risky to be cared for by someone
who is impaired.” You know what is more
risky than that? It is having no
physician at all when you desperately need one.
My advice is to build a relationship with a physician while you still
can. If your physician is not empathetic
or appears to be suffering from burnout, my cautionary recommendation is to be
careful what you wish for, because you just might get it.
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