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Journal Article

Citation

Zisook S, Doran N, Mortali M, Hoffman L, Downs N, Davidson J, Fergerson B, Rubanovich CK, Shapiro D, Tai-Seale M, Iglewicz A, Nestsiarovich A, Moutier CY. J. Affect. Disord. 2022; 312: 259-267.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jad.2022.06.047

PMID

35760197

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Burnout is a "normal" albeit concerning response to workplace stress, whereas Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is a serious illness associated with impairment and suicide risk. Because of symptomatic overlap between the two conditions and MDD-associated stigma, individuals reporting work-related stress and depression often are "diagnosed" with burnout at the expense of recognizing and treating MDD. Our study aimed to leverage organizational implementation of the American Foundation of Suicide Prevention's Interactive Screening Program to elucidate relationships among burnout, depression, and other suicide risk factors.

METHODS: 2281 of about 30,000 (~7.6 %) medical trainees, staff, and faculty responded to an anonymous online stress and depression questionnaire. Respondents were grouped into four cohorts: screened positive for burnout alone (n = 439, 19 %), depression alone (n = 268, 12 %), both conditions (n = 759, 33 %), or neither condition (n = 817, 36 %), and compared on multiple measures of distress and other suicide risk factors.

RESULTS: Burnout alone and depression alone each predicted greater distress and suicide risk compared with neither condition. Depression was a stronger predictor than burnout and demonstrated a consistent association with other suicide risk factors regardless of whether burnout was present. In contrast, burnout was not consistently associated with other suicide risk factors when depression was present. LIMITATIONS: The sample was limited to one state-supported academic medical center; to individuals who elected to take the online survey; and relied on a single item, non-validated measure of burnout.

CONCLUSION: When emotional distress is reported by healthcare workers, attention should not stop at "burnout," as burnout frequently comingles with clinical depression, a serious and treatable mental health condition.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Depression; Suicide; Burnout; Suicide risk; *Suicide/psychology; Major Depressive Disorder; Intense affective states; *Occupational Stress/epidemiology; Depression/psychology; *Depressive Disorder, Major/diagnosis/epidemiology; Health Personnel/psychology; *Burnout, Professional/epidemiology/psychology

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