Lifestyle Medicine Practitioners Implementing a Greater Proportion of Lifestyle Medicine Experience Less Burnout

Kathryn J. Pollard, Joel Gittelsohn, Padmaja Patel, Liana Lianov, Kelly Freeman, Kara L. Staffier, Kaitlyn R. Pauly, Micaela C. Karlsen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: To identify reasons for burnout, characterize the effect of lifestyle medicine (LM) practice on burnout, and assess the risk of burnout in relation to the proportion of LM practice. Design: Analysis of mixed methods data from a large, cross-sectional survey on LM practice. Setting: Web-based survey platform. Participants: Members of an LM medical professional society at the time of survey administration. Methods: Practitioner members of a medical professional society were recruited to a cross-sectional, online survey. Data were collected on LM practice and experiences with burnout. Free-text data were thematically grouped and counted, and the association of burnout with the proportion of lifestyle-based medical practice was analyzed using logistic regression. Results: Of 482 respondents, 58% reported currently feeling burned out, 28% used to feel burned out but no longer do, and 90% reported LM had positively impacted their professional satisfaction. Among LM practitioners surveyed, practicing more LM was associated with a 43% decrease (0.569; 95% CI: 0.384, 0.845; P = 0.0051) in the odds of experiencing burnout. Top reasons for positive impact included professional satisfaction, sense of accomplishment, and meaningfulness (44%); improved patient outcomes and patient satisfaction (26%); enjoyment of teaching/coaching and engaging in relationships (22%); and helps me personally: quality of life and stress (22%). Conclusion: Implementing LM as a greater proportion of medical practice was associated with lower likelihood of burnout among LM practitioners. Results suggest that increased feelings of accomplishment due to improved patient outcomes and reduced depersonalization contribute to reduced burnout.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1121-1132
Number of pages12
JournalAmerican Journal of Health Promotion
Volume37
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2023

Keywords

  • burnout
  • healthcare
  • lifestyle medicine
  • physician burnout
  • physician well-being
  • practitioner burnout
  • qualitative
  • survey

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Health(social science)
  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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