Intimate Partner Relationships, Work-Life Factors, and Their Associations With Burnout Among Partnered Pediatric Residents

Academic Pediatrics
Selin Tuysuzoglu SagalowskyRobert J Vinci

Abstract

Burnout is prevalent among pediatric residents, and reducing burnout is a priority for pediatric residency programs. Understanding residents' personal circumstances, including relationship satisfaction and perceived work-life conflict, may identify novel determinants of burnout. To describe intimate partner relationships among pediatric residents and examine associations among relationship satisfaction, work-life factors, and burnout. We identified 203 partnered residents (married or in a self-identified committed, ongoing relationship) from a cross-sectional survey of 258 residents in 11 New England pediatric programs (response rate 54% of 486 surveys distributed), conducted from April through June of 2013. We analyzed associations among relationship satisfaction, work-life factors, and burnout using multivariable regression. Burnout was measured with the brief Maslach Burnout Inventory, and relationship satisfaction with the validated Relationship Assessment Scale. Burnout was reported by 40.9% of partnered respondents. The vast majority of partnered residents (n = 167; 85.2%) reported high relationship satisfaction. Lower relationship satisfaction was not associated with burnout. Approximately half of the respondents (n = 10...Continue Reading

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Citations

Dec 18, 2019·Pediatrics·Kathi J KemperUNKNOWN PEDIATRIC RESIDENT BURNOUT-RESILIENCE STUDY CONSORTIUM

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