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- EHR3
- electronic health record3
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- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention1
- Chief Well-being Officer1
- CI1
- confidence interval1
- CWO1
- IMPACT1
- Improving and Modeling Physician Action for Culture Transformation1
- odds ratio1
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The Compass
4 Results
- Special articleOpen Access
Organization-Wide Approaches to Foster Effective Unit-Level Efforts to Improve Clinician Well-Being
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 98Issue 1p163–180Published in issue: January, 2023- Tait D. Shanafelt
- David Larson
- Bryan Bohman
- Rachel Roberts
- Mickey Trockel
- Eva Weinlander
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0Health care delivery organizations are positioned to have a tremendous impact on addressing the variables in the practice environment that contribute to occupational distress and that, when optimized, can promote clinician well-being. Many organizations are committed to this work and have clarity on how to address general, system-wide issues and provide resources for individual clinicians. While such top of the organization elements are essential for success, many of the specific improvement efforts that are necessary must address local challenges at the work unit level (department, division, hospital ward, clinic). - Original articleOpen Access
IMPACT: Evaluation of a Controlled Organizational Intervention Using Influential Peers to Promote Professional Fulfillment
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 98Issue 1p75–87Published online: December 1, 2022- Mickey T. Trockel
- Nikitha K. Menon
- Maryam S. Makowski
- Louise Y. Wen
- Rachel Roberts
- Bryan D. Bohman
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0To determine the effects of a popular opinion leader (POL)-led organizational intervention targeting all physicians and advanced practice providers (APPs) working within clinic groups on professional fulfillment (primary outcome), gratitude, burnout, self-valuation, and turnover intent. - Special articleOpen Access
Physician Well-being 2.0: Where Are We and Where Are We Going?
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 96Issue 10p2682–2693Published in issue: October, 2021- Tait D. Shanafelt
Cited in Scopus: 17Although awareness of the importance of physician well-being has increased in recent years, the research that defined this issue, identified the contributing factors, and provided evidence on effective individual and system-level solutions has been maturing for several decades. During this interval, the field has evolved through several phases, each influenced not only by an expanding research base but also by changes in the demographic characteristics of the physician workforce and the evolution of the health care delivery system. - Special articleOpen Access
Healing the Professional Culture of Medicine
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 94Issue 8p1556–1566Published online: July 11, 2019- Tait D. Shanafelt
- Edgar Schein
- Lloyd B. Minor
- Mickey Trockel
- Peter Schein
- Darrell Kirch
Cited in Scopus: 55The past decade has been a time of great change for US physicians. Many physicians feel that the care delivery system has become a barrier to providing high-quality care rather than facilitating it. Although physician distress and some of the contributing factors are now widely recognized, much of the distress physicians are experiencing is related to insidious issues affecting the cultures of our profession, our health care organizations, and the health care delivery system. Culture refers to the shared and fundamental beliefs of a group that are so widely accepted that they are implicit and often no longer recognized.