#JHMChat – Beyond Burnout: Collective Suffering and Organizational Compassion

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By Jen Readlynn, MD, FHM |  April 26, 2023 | 

Burnout. It’s an all-too-familiar term for those in healthcare and other service fields. Often the onus is on the burned-out person to recognize and mitigate their burnout and activities such as   yoga and deep breathing are offered as quick fixes. For our March #JHMChat, we turned to Dr. Rachel Thienprayoon’s article, “Beyond Burnout: Collective suffering and organizational compassion.” Dr. Thienprayoon, served as our guest expert as we discussed how hospitalists deal with burnout as we reflect on the last three years of COVID-19, accelerated staffing shortages, and our own experiences moving through burnout.

Our first question asked participants, “In a world where many clinicians are feeling burned out, what helps you see your value?” There was an overwhelming response to the grounding nature of providing patient care and spending time with patients and families.

Many commented on how connecting with learners and their colleagues, and contributing to change in the system helped them see their value. Dr. Thienprayoon pointed out that seeing how we have influenced change – whether it is growth in our learners, a successful quality improvement initiative, or a new patient care policy – gives us agency, which helps clinicians feel valued.

Clearly, our participants feel valued when supporting others, whether that be patients, learners, or colleagues. Many also commented that small acts of gratitude – a simple “thank you” from a patient or note of appreciation from a learner or colleague goes a long way in feeling valued.

After learning what makes our participants feel valued and what they have agency over, we turned toward more systemic influences on burnout, asking, “What would organizational compassion look like for you?”

Dr. Mahoney gave us insight into the culture that helps to create organizational compassion – interprofessional team members working together to ease each other’s struggles.

Others focused on ensuring the necessary supports and resources are in place to ensure hospitalists can be authentic, and have dignity and integrity in their work. We need to know we can take great care of our patients and have respect as humans with lives outside of medicine.

As the chat continued, we learned that our participants have wonderful colleagues who recognize when they are not themselves and speak up. Sharing experiences, even saying out loud how hard our job is, makes people feel less alone and more valued. We discussed the importance of giving ourselves the grace we often give others, and remembering that we are often our harshest critics.

Building on what we learned about feeling valued and what organizational compassion looks like, we asked participants to share how their identities outside of medicine enhance their identity as a clinician. The response was incredibly insightful and uplifting, ranging from burnout prevention and stress relief, to providing a source of connection to our patients. These connections help break down barriers, even in difficult conversations.

Burnout is complex, and there are so many factors that contribute. Feeling valued through connections, having a meaningful role in growth and change, receiving small acts of gratitude, feeling supported as whole individuals, and using our identities outside of medicine to enhance our relationships in medicine help to mitigate burnout. Organizations can also demonstrate compassion by including frontline stakeholders in decisions around change and showing awareness of the work these stakeholders perform.

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About the Author: Jen Readlynn, MD, FHM

Dr. Jennifer K. Readlynn is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine, Hospital Medicine, at the University of Rochester Medical Center. She earned her B.A. in Neuroscience and Women’s Studies at Colgate University in 2007, and her MD at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in 2011, with an emphasis in medical education. In addition to being an academic hospitalist, she is the Unit Medical Director for the Medical Observation Unit, or MOU. Dr. Readlynn is a co-leader of an interdisciplinary team that focuses on quality improvement related to patient flow, mobility and reducing hospital-associated delirium, in addition to providing patient and family-centered care. She is assistant director of the Hospital Medicine Division Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) program, working to improve faculty, resident and student skills in utilizing POCUS, which allows them to extend the physical exam and aid in clinical decision-making.

Outside of the University of Rochester, Dr. Readlynn is a Digital Media Fellow for the Journal of Hospital Medicine, an editorial board member of The Hospitalist, and a member of the Academic Committee for the Society of Hospital Medicine. Her interests include how social media can be used in medical education, health equity, diversity and inclusion, quality improvement/high value care and clinical reasoning.

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