Single item measures of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization are useful for assessing burnout in medical professionals.
about
Using a single item to measure burnout in primary care staff: a psychometric evaluation.A survey of U.S. physicians and their partners regarding the impact of work-home conflictMedical student satisfaction, coping and burnout in direct-entry versus graduate-entry programmes.Relationships of work characteristics to job satisfaction, turnover intention, and burnout among doctors in the district public-private mixed health system of BangladeshMedical student debt and major life choices other than specialty.Burnout and career satisfaction among US oncologists.The prevalence of medical student mistreatment and its association with burnout.Comparative utility of a single-item versus multiple-item measure of self-efficacy in predicting relapse among young adultsBurnout among after-hours home visit doctors in Australia.Teaching motivational interviewing to primary care staff in the Veterans Health Administration.Scaling-up an efficacious school-based physical activity intervention: Study protocol for the 'Internet-based Professional Learning to help teachers support Activity in Youth' (iPLAY) cluster randomized controlled trial and scale-up implementation eConcurrent validity of single-item measures of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization in burnout assessment.Student-directed retrieval practice is a predictor of medical licensing examination performance.Emotionally exhausting factors in general practitioners' workOncology fellows’ career plans, expectations, and well-being: do fellows know what they are getting into?Burnout and distress among internal medicine program directors: results of a national surveyImplementing motivational interviewing in primary care: the role of provider characteristics.An exploration of the role of religion/spirituality in the promotion of physicians' wellbeing in Emergency MedicineFunctional Neuroimaging Correlates of Burnout among Internal Medicine Residents and Faculty MembersCaring for oneself to care for others: physicians and their self-careWhat Patients Value About Reading Visit Notes: A Qualitative Inquiry of Patient Experiences With Their Health Information.Factors Associated With Care Workers' Intention to Leave Employment in Nursing Homes: A Secondary Data Analysis of the Swiss Nursing Homes Human Resources Project.The reliability and validity of three-item screening measures for burnout: Evidence from group-employed health care practitioners in upstate New York.Project on the Good Physician: A Proposal for a Moral Intuitionist Model of Virtuous Caring.Current Workforce Characteristics and Burnout in Pediatric Emergency Medicine.Validation of Single-Item Screening Measures for Provider Burnout in a Rural Health Care Network.The Impact of a Required Longitudinal Stress Management and Resilience Training Course for First-Year Medical Students.Experiences of Canadian oncologists with difficult patient deaths and coping strategies usedShared decision making for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.How much is lost in using single items?Job Satisfaction and Burnout among Intensive Care Unit Nurses and Physicians.J. Edward Berk distinguished lecture: avoiding burnout: finding balance between work and everything else.Burnout, depression and suicidal ideation in dental and dental hygiene students.Personality Traits Are Associated with Academic Achievement in Medical School: A Nationally Representative Study.Association of Intrinsic Motivating Factors and Markers of Physician Well-Being: A National Physician Survey.Oncologists' negative attitudes towards expressing emotion over patient death and burnout.Gender differences in the effect of grief reactions and burnout on emotional distress among clinical oncologists.International study of medical school learning environments and their relationship with student well-being and empathy.A Brief Instrument to Assess Both Burnout and Professional Fulfillment in Physicians: Reliability and Validity, Including Correlation with Self-Reported Medical Errors, in a Sample of Resident and Practicing Physicians.Internal Medicine Residents' Perceived Responsibility for Patients at Hospital Discharge: A National Survey.
P2860
Q27312661-4160EF27-4060-49A8-AA53-3696F74ADA62Q28394181-BE6D5CFC-8D4C-4065-9468-275D680FCBC7Q30152041-77EE3BA5-07E2-467F-9875-FE1A56995E9CQ33823776-636040EA-4DBF-4FCE-A335-AEBD3EEB8E40Q34498925-A79B277A-856D-415F-83A8-1635D76A4B5EQ35086338-25CE011B-5B07-4877-99E0-2BCC02EC43DFQ35461443-46358C4A-0CC0-455D-B74D-F7716D479B11Q35860742-34965170-D02F-47CA-B3CB-3579ECCDDA29Q35893041-337F1E45-82A8-4355-88E4-5117035D6FDFQ36111090-CA8EC9CC-6937-4E43-9E56-3DE7B427DD6FQ36111919-BAB6BB01-52AF-4BF4-861C-41139D87A9C8Q36331453-3EB4B9F5-8063-4160-9FB8-48358D552579Q36355686-37839F9D-DA93-47F1-83A0-D4A0F606F523Q36572014-4A35D50A-56B4-4323-BDDD-BA303D33BBDDQ36925049-5908B97E-0334-4372-8C70-632F904FDD8BQ37009155-0A632C66-41EF-4DA5-BB91-789A2600DD90Q37030601-21D05930-01AA-4676-B998-0FC91829868FQ37056691-5C449CEB-9545-4E05-99A4-4319321877F1Q37229958-CB5EB5F8-5837-43D4-A08B-B6B1A1869169Q37682712-6A229354-2000-40C0-B84D-6AFF71A4BBE3Q38657360-A137ABA3-6A5F-47F7-B2A7-4B562A33BFC1Q38675360-D5666E3D-32F2-4931-9209-5471C48D0011Q38775182-293D3BCA-45AE-4F84-B0F9-76EAB6AFCDF1Q38836963-82D8E9DB-5B73-4F88-890E-37040F1C334AQ38925833-F55AAFA1-FF21-4709-BAE7-24FC2244E7B5Q39274606-6858DB12-4C1A-4CBA-A385-42E9D6DDB0D1Q39312128-DF0EE024-DD88-45BB-B59E-4FC17AAE4258Q41559486-82296908-BE33-4A1E-AC3F-E366582D14D3Q41997375-9423ED95-610A-40A5-B7AF-A815BFABB480Q42000902-76B39DC9-7F28-4E51-B643-72375EE4D304Q42875024-DFC755E5-6851-43DE-B8D9-5B0E95E033ECQ44967876-C54BC8BF-3257-471A-B46F-A8C339E6F0D8Q45053579-D3BC48C1-C214-43BC-83D9-9972BAE811C9Q47304135-D8E875B6-40ED-4083-8160-F9BEAB41C4BAQ47345953-04160015-91CE-4E0C-AF7B-6573885D797EQ47354003-567D38F3-92A7-4496-AA43-0BAFA0AA1D6DQ47402395-31B2EE9A-C4FF-4D44-BD0C-9BF361F11DB2Q47613346-B5ADB59C-57BF-4F80-823C-64C50F90A7C4Q47658082-47DD7798-F693-4FE4-AC58-2CA77C2AA2FEQ47686853-BCFF7B17-608A-4F84-8C48-351B0701181A
P2860
Single item measures of emotional exhaustion and depersonalization are useful for assessing burnout in medical professionals.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on 03 October 2009
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@en
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@nl
type
label
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@en
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@nl
prefLabel
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@en
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
Single item measures of emotio ...... nout in medical professionals.
@en
P2093
Colin P West
Jeff A Sloan
Liselotte N Dyrbye
Tait D Shanafelt
P2860
P2888
P304
P356
10.1007/S11606-009-1129-Z
P577
2009-10-03T00:00:00Z