• J Gen Intern Med · Mar 2013

    Utility of a brief screening tool to identify physicians in distress.

    • Liselotte N Dyrbye, Daniel Satele, Jeff Sloan, and Tait D Shanafelt.
    • Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA. dyrbye.liselotte@mayo.edu
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Mar 1;28(3):421-7.

    BackgroundDespite a high prevalence of distress, few physicians seek help. Earlier identification of physicians in distress has been hampered by the lack of a brief screening instrument to assess the common forms of distress.ObjectiveTo evaluate the ability of the seven-item Physician Well-Being Index (PWBI) to i) stratify physician well-being in several important dimensions (mental quality of life [QOL], fatigue, suicidal ideation); and ii) identify physicians whose degree of distress may negatively impact their practice (career satisfaction, intent to leave current position, medical errors).DesignCross-sectional study.ParticipantsNational sample of 6,994 U.S. physicians.Main MeasuresPWBI, Mental QOL, fatigue, suicidal ideation, career satisfaction,and clinical practice measures.Key ResultsPhysicians with low mental QOL, high fatigue, or recent (< 12 months) suicidal ideation were more likely to endorse each of the seven PWBI items and a greater number of total items (all P < 0 .001). Assuming a prevalence of 19 %, the PWBI could reduce the post-test probability of a physician having low mental QOL to < 1 % or raise it to > 75 %. The likelihood ratio for low mental QOL among physicians with PWBI scores ≥ 4 was 3.85 in comparison to 0.33 for those with scores < 4. At a threshold score of >4, the PWBI's specificity for identifying physicians with low mental QOL, high fatigue, or recent suicidal ideation were 85.8 %. PWBI score also stratified physicians' career satisfaction, reported intent to leave current practice, and self-reported medical errors.ConclusionsThe seven-item PWBI appears to be a useful screening index to identify physicians with distress in a variety of dimensions and whose degree of distress may negatively impact their practice.

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