Abbreviated mindfulness intervention for job satisfaction, quality of life, and compassion in primary care clinicians: a pilot study

Luke Fortney, Charlene Luchterhand, Larissa Zakletskaia, Aleksandra Zgierska, David Rakel, Luke Fortney, Charlene Luchterhand, Larissa Zakletskaia, Aleksandra Zgierska, David Rakel

Abstract

Purpose: Burnout, attrition, and low work satisfaction of primary care physicians are growing concerns and can have a negative influence on health care. Interventions for clinicians that improve work-life balance are few and poorly understood. We undertook this study as a first step in investigating whether an abbreviated mindfulness intervention could increase job satisfaction, quality of life, and compassion among primary care clinicians.

Methods: A total of 30 primary care clinicians participated in an abbreviated mindfulness course. We used a single-sample, pre-post design. At 4 points in time (baseline, and 1 day, 8 weeks, and 9 months postintervention), participants completed a set of online measures assessing burnout, anxiety, stress, resilience, and compassion. We used a linear mixed-effects model analysis to assess changes in outcome measures.

Results: Participants had improvements compared with baseline at all 3 follow-up time points. At 9 months postintervention, they had significantly better scores (1) on all Maslach Burnout Inventory burnout subscales-Emotional Exhaustion (P =.009), Depersonalization (P = .005), and Personal Accomplishment (P <.001); (2) on the Depression (P =.001), Anxiety (P =.006), and Stress (P = .002) subscales of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales-21; and (3) for perceived stress (P = .002) assessed with the Perceived Stress Scale. There were no significant changes on the 14-item Resilience Scale and the Santa Clara Brief Compassion Scale.

Conclusions: In this uncontrolled pilot study, participating in an abbreviated mindfulness training course adapted for primary care clinicians was associated with reductions in indicators of job burnout, depression, anxiety, and stress. Modified mindfulness training may be a time-efficient tool to help support clinician health and well-being, which may have implications for patient care.

Keywords: Burnout; anxiety; clinicians; compassion; depression; job satisfaction; mindfulness; physicians; primary care; stress.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Baseline Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) subscale mean scores for study sample (N = 30) compared with the MBI normative sample (N = 11,067). Notes: The MBI normative sample consists of the following occupational subgroups: teaching (K-12) subgroup is composed of 4,163 teachers of kindergarten through grade 12; postsecondary education subgroup is composed of 635 college and professional school educators; social services subgroup is composed of 1,538 social workers and child protective services workers; medicine subgroup is composed of 1,104 physicians and nurses; mental health subgroup is composed of 730 psychologists, psychotherapists, counselors, mental hospital staff, and psychiatrists; “other” subgroup is composed of 2,897 legal aid employees, attorneys, police officers, probation officers, ministers, librarians, and agency administrators.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Means for the outcome measures assessed at baseline and postintervention (N = 30 at baseline).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Means for the outcome measures assessed at baseline and postintervention (N = 30 at baseline).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Means for the outcome measures assessed at baseline and postintervention (N = 30 at baseline).

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Source: PubMed

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