Resource type: Peer-Reviewed Literature
Meeting the Imperative to Improve Physician Well-Being: Assessment Of An Innovation Program

This study, published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, sought to assess the impact of a reproducible organizational intervention program with the aim of...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Quality of Life, Burnout, Educational Debt, and Medical Knowledge Among Internal Medicine Residents

This study, published in JAMA, sought to measure well-being in a national sample of internal medicine residents and to evaluate relationships with demographics,...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Association of an Educational Program in Mindful Communication With Burnout, Empathy, and Attitudes Among Primary Care Physicians

This study, published in JAMA, sought to determine whether an intensive educational program in mindfulness, communication, and self-awareness is associated with...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Association of Perceived Medical Errors with Resident Distress and Empathy: A Prospective Longitudinal Study

This study, published in JAMA, sought to assess the frequency of self-perceived medical errors among resident physicians and to determine the association of...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Work-Family Conflict and the Sex Difference in Depression Among Training Physicians

This study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, sought to assess whether depression disproportionately affects female physicians compared with male physicians...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Changes in Hospital Nurse Work Environments and Nurse Job Outcomes: An Analysis of Panel Data

This study, published in the International Journal of Nursing Studies, sought to demonstrate how rates of burnout, intention to leave, and job dissatisfaction...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Electronic Health Record Logs Indicate That Physicians Split Time Evenly Between Seeing Patients And Desktop Medicine

This study, published in Health Affairs, used data captured by the access time stamp functionality of an electronic health record (EHR) to examine physician work...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
US Physician Practices Spend More Than $15.4 Billion Annually to Report Quality Measures

This study, published in Health Affairs, sought to assess the burden of quality measure reporting on physician practices. The authors surveyed 1,000 randomly...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Do US Medical Licensing Applications Treat Mental and Physical Illness Equivalently?

This study, published in Family Medicine, sought to assess whether state medical licensing boards asked about mental and physical health conditions differently and...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Doctors’ Experiences and Their Perception of the Most Stressful Aspects of Complaints Processes in the UK: An Analysis of Qualitative Survey Data

This study, published in BMJ Open, sought to examine doctors' experiences of complaints processes in the United Kingdom, including which aspects of the complaints...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
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