Burnout and Brownout in Intensive Care Physicians in the Era of COVID-19: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Environment
2.2. Study Design and Setting
2.3. Participants
2.4. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Socio-Health Context and Organisation of Work during the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.1.1. Work Uncertainty and Adaptation to Change
It’s true that because we are still training to become doctors, well, I’m a bit worried that I’ll be less well trained in these [previously mentioned] problems than in COVID problems.Male, 25–35 years old (T1)
3.1.2. Perceived Characteristics of the Work Environment
Well, these are difficult times, because we have a greater workload (…) the patients are all the more demanding (…) sometimes [these difficult times] a little complicated on a human level.Male, 25–35 years old (T1)
But there were a lot of really aggressive families (…) it was really claim (…).Female, 25–35 years old (T2)
3.1.3. Social Climate and Well-Being at Work
However, it still exacerbated uh… also tensions and personality types from what I was told (…) people who were quite blocking, who never made things easier.Female, 35–45 years old (T1)
3.1.4. Work–Life Balance
It was the time; we spent so much time in the hospital that the little we spent at home was for essential things, for eating, sleeping, taking a shower (…) and we started [all over] again.Female, 25–35 years old (T2)
3.2. The Relationship with Patients in ICU and Their Relatives, a New Approach in the COVID-19 Crisis Era
3.2.1. The Use of Information and Communication Technologies with Patients’ Families
It [ICT] doesn’t go down well, and it harms families’ understanding of the situation. Uh, especially when we come to the moment when, uh, we discuss treatment interruptions, uh… well the fact that the families haven’t seen the patient, haven’t see him deteriorate (…) it doesn’t help us work.Male, 35–45 years old (T1)
3.2.2. Quality of the Care Provider–Patient Relationship
Well, you get the feeling you’re entering the room and patient number 1 is on a respirator, patient number 2 is on a respirator, etc. and you… it’s totally impersonal in the end.Female, 25–35 years old (T1)
3.2.3. Ethical Issues of Care and Access to Care in the Pandemic Context
And, uh, some of my colleagues tend to give up on some patients (…) I have a lot of colleagues who, uh, want to stop after two weeks, uh, raise their eyebrows… when we [all] know that it’s a disease that takes time to heal.Male, 25–35 years old (T2)
3.3. Multiple Disorders of Mental Health: Between Burnout and Brownout
Compared to the workload, it’s not so much, uh, *respondent inhales* it’s not so much the, the stress, it’s more, uh, it was more, really, physical fatigue.Male, 25–35 years old (T1)
We had fairly close relationships with the people we had on the phone; since they were on the phone every day, they confided things to us; sometimes we happened to have families of people who were themselves sick so they…we called them.Male, 25–35 years old (T1)
Type of Exhaustion | Burnout | Brownout | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Risk indicators and factors | Indicators | Factors | Indicators | Factors |
No. pers. concerned out of a total of 17 participants | 11 | 16 | 11 | 13 |
Then, there’s a kind of weariness that sets in because you realize that you, your, your medical work is very, very repetitive, uh, it’s a little unsettling to take care of…systematically, patients with the same disease.Male, 25–35 years old (T1)
Our beds are full all the time, [you feel] that the disease is still just as serious, that the patients, they just die; you get the impression you’re not of much use.Female, 25–35 years old (T1)
Well, in any case, recognition, we’ll never get it *laugh*, uh, it’s more like [financial] support saying, ‘take a little money and shut up’.Female, 25–35 years old (T2)
What is problematic is that there are no visits (…) we know that it’s almost inhuman, when all is said and done, not to open visits to families in contexts like that.Female, 25–35 years old (T2)
3.4. Benefits of the Pandemic on a Professional Level
As a result, we had a lot of chronic ICU patients, and indeed, I believe, yes, that I acquired skills and, yes, medical skills for these chronic patients, a bit of intensive care.Male, 25–35 years old (T2)
It reassured me about my ability to, uh, see that I could, uh, adapt to a situation, that is to say to change medical practice, because for us, it is a big change in practice.Male, 35–45 years old (T2)
The, the patients we take care of, they are… either they die, or they are… they remain very serious for a very long time; they remain very ill for a very long time (…) that, that made me realize a little, that what we do is not… it’s not magic.Male, 25–35 years old (T2)
It made it possible to be…to refocus on the priorities of our profession, that is to say that everyone went back to treating people, that’s still why we’re doctors (…) So we rediscovered our profession.Male, 35–45 years old (T1)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Perspective
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Collective Level | Individual Level | |
---|---|---|
Indicators related to the operation of the structure | Indicators related to worker health and security | Lack of energy to perform the job, problems with concentration and lack of “mental” availability at work, irritability, denigration about the job or the work environment, devaluation of the work performed, one’s own effectiveness and skills, unusual signs of disinvestment and disengagement from work, emotional exhaustion |
Working hours, staff turnover, absenteeism rate, company or structure activity, social relations | Activity of the occupational health service, occupational accidents, occupational diseases, serious or deteriorated situations, diagnosed and treated pathologies |
Organisational Dimension | Relational Dimension | Care-Related Dimension | Workplace-Related Dimension |
---|---|---|---|
Working hours, overwork, understaffing, inexperienced staff, emergencies, admissions, transfers | Conflict in the team, disagreement on the management of patients, difficulties of cooperation between the different departments, lack of recognition | Severity of pathologies, lack of information, management of uncertainty, difficulty communicating with patients, conflict with patients’ families, decision-making, risk of error, perception of inadequate care | Noise, unsuitable premises, equipment problems |
Authors | Main Indicators |
---|---|
Rigby, 2015 | Mental resignation; progressive disinvestment and disengagement at work; feelings of disillusionment and despondency; feelings of lassitude; uncertainty about one’s professional future; lack of perspective on one’s professional career; psychological and emotional health (e.g., sleep disorders, irritability, etc.); disinvestment in family and social life; absenteeism |
Alvesson and Spicer, 2016 | Feeling disillusioned and downcast; gradual disinvestment; disengagement; resignation |
Chapelle, 2018 | Decrease in psychic tension; disinvestment; loss of commitment; dissatisfaction |
Petiau, 2018 | Work-related malaise |
Knani and Gril, 2022 | Mental resignation; disengagement; feeling disillusioned and down |
Component Questions of the Interview Guide |
---|
How do you currently feel about your work? How would you describe your current state of health? What do you think is causing you to feel this way? On an emotional level, how do you deal with the context in which you work? Currently, how would you describe the working climate in your service? How would you describe the relationship you have with patients and their families? Can you tell me about decision making in the ICU? How do these decisions and the way they are made affect you and your work? Can you tell me about the way in which you articulate your private and professional life? At the moment, how do you see your career continuing? |
Category | Frequency | |
---|---|---|
Sex | Female | 5 |
Male | 12 | |
Status | Residents | 5 |
Qualified anaesthesiologists/intensivists | 12 | |
Age (years) | 25–35 | 12 |
35–45 | 4 | |
65–75 | 1 | |
Time working in ICU (years) | 0–5 | 7 |
5–10 | 7 | |
10–15 | 2 | |
40–45 | 1 | |
Professional practice | Anaesthesia and intensive care | 3 |
Intensive care only | 14 |
Category | Frequency | |
---|---|---|
Sex | Female | 3 |
Male | 6 | |
Status | Residents | 3 |
Qualified anaesthesiologists/intensivists | 6 | |
Age (years) | 25–35 | 7 |
35–45 | 2 | |
Time working in ICU (years) | 0–5 | 7 |
5–10 | 1 | |
10–15 | 1 | |
Professional practice | Anaesthesia and intensive care | 1 |
Intensive care only | 8 |
Categories | Sub-Categories |
---|---|
The socio-health context and organisation of work during the COVID-19 pandemic | Work uncertainty and adaptation to changes Perceived characteristics of the work environment Social climate and well-being at work Work–life balance |
The relationship with intensive care patients and their relatives, a new approach in the era of COVID-19 | Use of ICT with patients’ families Quality of the care provider–patient relationship Ethical issues of care and access to care in the pandemic context |
Multiple disorders of mental health: between burnout and brownout | Burnout Brownout |
Resources contributing to maintaining good mental health | - |
Burnout Factors | Burnout Indicators | Brownout Factors | Brownout Indicators |
---|---|---|---|
Work uncertainty and adaptation to changes * | Individual level (emotional exhaustion, lack of energy to perform the job) * | Ethical issues of a new form of communication with patients’ families (ICT) * | Mental health (sleep disorders) * |
Limits and ethical issues of a new form of communication with patients’ families (ICT) * | Individual level (depreciation of the work accomplished) * | Negative work environment and negative social climate *** | Uncertainty of professional career prospects *** |
Increased workload and role conflicts *** | Individual level (irritability) ** | Work uncertainty and incomprehension of the tasks to be accomplished *** | Feeling of uselessness and weariness, demotivation *** |
Negative work environment, lack of consideration and recognition *** | Collective level (related to the functioning of the structure) *** | Ethical issues of care and access to care in the pandemic context *** | Dissatisfaction *** |
Work–life conflict *** | Individual level (emotional exhaustion) *** | Feeling disillusioned and down *** | |
Questioning the meaning of the doctor–patient relationship: human and communicative aspects *** | Individual level (devaluation of one’s skills) *** | ||
Ethical issues of care and access to care in the pandemic context *** |
Type of Exhaustion | Burnout (BO) | Brownout (BWO) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Interview 1 | Indic. BO 1 | Fact. BO 2 | Indic. BWO 2 | Fact. BWO 2 |
Interview 3 | Indic. BO 1 | Fact. BO 1 | Indic. BWO 3 | Fact. BWO 1 |
Interview 4 | * | Fact. BO 2 | * | ** |
Interview 5 | Indic. BO 1 | Fact. BO 1 | Indic. BWO 1 | Fact. BWO 1 |
Interview 8 | * | Fact. BO 1 | Indic. BWO 1 | Fact. BWO 1 |
Interview 10 | Indic. BO 1 | Fact. BO 1 | Indic. BWO 1 | Fact. BWO 1 |
Interview 12 | Indic. BO 2 | Fact. BO 1 | Indic. BWO 1 | Fact. BWO 1 |
Interview 15 | Indic. BO 2 | Fact. BO 1 | * | Fact. BWO 2 |
Interview 17 | * | ** | Indic. BWO 2 | Fact. BWO 1 |
No. of ICPs concerned | 6 | 8 | 6 | 8 |
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Baillat, L.; Vayre, E.; Préau, M.; Guérin, C. Burnout and Brownout in Intensive Care Physicians in the Era of COVID-19: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 6029. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20116029
Baillat L, Vayre E, Préau M, Guérin C. Burnout and Brownout in Intensive Care Physicians in the Era of COVID-19: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(11):6029. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20116029
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaillat, Léa, Emilie Vayre, Marie Préau, and Claude Guérin. 2023. "Burnout and Brownout in Intensive Care Physicians in the Era of COVID-19: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 11: 6029. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20116029
APA StyleBaillat, L., Vayre, E., Préau, M., & Guérin, C. (2023). Burnout and Brownout in Intensive Care Physicians in the Era of COVID-19: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(11), 6029. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20116029