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Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 11/20/23

November 20, 2023 Dr. Jayne 1 Comment

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has launched an initiative to tackle burnout in healthcare. The Impact Wellbeing initiative falls under the auspices of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). According to the tagline on its website, it’s designed for “building a system where healthcare workers thrive.” It will provide “evidence-informed solutions” and resources to hospital leaders on avoiding burnout and promoting wellbeing for workers.

I was pleased to see that the website encourages hospitals to use materials from the Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes’ Foundation to address how hospitals can help staff address mental health needs without being penalized. Many hospitals and healthcare organizations still have questions on their employment and credentialing applications that stigmatize mental health conditions rather than supporting those that live with them.

As an example, one job for which I applied asked, “Have you ever been treated for a mental health condition?” with boxes to check yes or no, but no way to provide explanatory information. A better way to approach this is to ask whether the applicant has any current impairment that will prevent them from performing the duties of the position. There are plenty of mental health conditions that are episodic, and asking about past conditions that may be resolved hasn’t been shown to do anything but prevent people from honestly answering the questions.

In looking at some of the other materials on the site, as well as interviews with NIOSH staff that appeared in the media at the time of the announcement, it feels like the organization’s leadership understands that talking about resiliency or offering wellness programs doesn’t scratch the surface where employee mistreatment is concerned. Healthcare workers encounter bullying, harassment, and moral injury on a daily basis and those elements need to be addressed as part of an overall solution.

The initiative also encourages the leadership of healthcare delivery organizations to involve those affected in the process of defining the issues and solving them. I don’t know when it became a revolutionary idea to talk to people in order to understand their needs, but I’m happy to see recognition of the idea featuring prominently in the campaign. Organizers can use the NIOSH Worker Well-Bring Questionnaire to better understand where their workers are across domains that include policies, culture, environment, personal health, and home/community factors.

Although I appreciate that the focus of the campaign is on hospitals since they’re such a critical part of our healthcare infrastructure, I’d like to see these elements addressed in other care delivery sites, such as urgent care centers. There are 14,000 urgent care centers in the US, and according to data provided by the Urgent Care Association, more than 25% of adults visited an urgent care center in the last year.

Unfortunately, the level of regulation for those facilities varies from state to state, and in talking to physician colleagues, abuses are becoming more common as private equity companies expand in the industry. For a while, we saw a lot of emergency department physicians leave those environments to go to the relatively slower pace of urgent care. However, as the complexity of patients presenting to urgent care rises, and the number of patients physicians are expected to see each hour increases, we’re seeing physicians leave those environments as well.

Given the reliance by hospitals on nurses to deliver patient care, there’s a lot of push by nursing organizations to improve things. Since urgent cares use many more non-nurse caregivers — such as medical assistants, emergency medical technicians, and unlicensed patient care technicians — to deliver care at a lower cost, there aren’t many advocacy organizations looking out for those workers.

Quite a few urgent care centers are physician owned and operate more under a private practice model than an emergency care model, so that adds another element to the problem. In my area, a local multi-site urgent care center recently closed after the physician owner was arrested, leaving staff and patients in the lurch. Other organizations have struggled to absorb those visit volumes in the face of their own staffing shortages, and it’s been a bit of a mess.

Meanwhile, capable physicians sit on the sidelines because they’re not willing to go back to abusive environments. At my former clinical employer, nearly all the physician employees left when the private equity company that acquired it started tightening the screws to squeeze out more profit. I know at least six of us who would return from our early retirements if the working conditions were less atrocious.

In speaking with colleagues across the country, this experience is in no way unique. One local urgent care chain classifies its physicians as hourly employees, but pays a “shift rate” that requires them to stay until all patients have left without additional pay for the additional time. I’m not sure how that’s legal under state labor laws, but they’ve gotten away with it for a number of years. On the other hand, it might be one explanation for why they have locations that are mothballed because they can’t staff them.

I admit I didn’t read every single word on the CDC website for the program and didn’t follow every link, but I didn’t see any mention of how organizations need to do more to believe workers when they complain or how to take action when issues are reported. There is still a culture at many organizations of just saying “it is what it is” or “suck it up” when employees report exploitive practices. People are suffering from compassion fatigue, which can lead to lack of empathy and may contribute to workplace bullying if left unchecked.

At one local hospital, nurses scheduled for 12-hour overnight shifts routinely have to stay for 14 or 15 hours due to staffing issues. I guarantee that situation is not doing much for morale or burnout prevention. Even among healthcare workers, I hear comments like “you chose healthcare, what did you expect?” which doesn’t help solve the issue. I have a handful of non-medical friends who understand what we go through, but when medical folks can’t even support each other, how can we expect outsiders to understand what we’re going through?

It will be interesting to follow the progress of the initiative over time and to see how many organizations are using the tools and trying to drive positive change vs. just paying lip service to the idea.

If you’re a care delivery organization leader, had you heard of the initiative before today? What steps are you taking to drive change? Leave a comment or email me.

Email Dr. Jayne.



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Currently there is "1 comment" on this Article:

  1. Re:. “For a while, we saw a lot of emergency department physicians leave those environments to go to the relatively slower pace of urgent care.”

    Non-clincian here, OK? It took several re-reads of this to comprehend it, but I’ve got it now.

    It reads like something Dr. Suess would write! Not that Dr. Jayne is a poor writer, but that “urgent care” can be a less stressful workplace.

    Things have improved with the end of the Pandemic, no?







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