Submitted by: Joshua Huang, University of Alberta
What is Burnout?
According to the World Health Organization, “Burn-out is a syndrome conceptualized as resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed. It is characterized by three dimensions:
- feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion;
- increased mental distance from one’s job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one’s job; and
- reduced professional efficacy.” [1]
Epidemiology
Per the Canadian Medical Association’s 2021 National Physician Health Survey [2]:
- More than 50% of attendings and residents report symptoms of burnout
- Increased among general practitioners, remote/rural practitioners, and physicians with fewer years of work experience
- Higher amongst women (59%) vs men (43%)
- >1.5x increase from 2017 results
Risk Factors [3]
- High workload and long hours
- Limited well-being support
- Job dissatisfaction
- Poor sleep hygiene
- Young age (<30 years)
- Personality characteristics such as cynicism, anxiety, difficulty with emotional regulation
- Impersonal and control orientation
Signs & Symptoms [4]
- Physical: Increased heart rate and blood pressure, restlessness, pain, nausea, decreased immune function, frequent headaches
- Affective: Depressed/changing mood, anxiousness, irritability, heightened tension, hypersensitivity, blunted empathy, anger and fear
- Cognitive – Helplessness, cynical perception, pessimism
- Behavioural – emotional outbursts, declined productivity, increased rate of medical errors
- Motivation – decreased motivation, loss of interest, low morale
Treatment
- Individual-level interventions
- Engaging in mindfulness-based therapies, cognitive behavioral therapy, and exercise [5]
- seeking out coaching, writing a gratitude journal, yoga, and building social relationships withpeers and colleagues [6]
- System-level interventions:
- utilizing multidisciplinary team members to lessen physician workload (i.e. documentation, scribes) [6]
- implementing large language models (AI) to help with documentation [6]
References:
- World Health Organization. Burn-out an “occupational phenomenon”: International Classification of Diseases, 2019. May 2019.
- Canadian Medical Association (CMA), Ipsos. CMA 2021 national physician health survey. Ottawa: The Association; 2022 Aug 24
- Shalaby, R., Oluwasina, F., Eboreime, E., El Gindi, H., Agyapong, B., Hrabok, M., … & Agyapong, V. I. O. (2023). Burnout among residents: prevalence and predictors of depersonalization, emotional exhaustion and professional unfulfillment among resident doctors in Canada. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3677.
- Merlo, G., & Rippe, J. (2021). Physician burnout: A lifestyle medicine perspective. American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine, 15(2), 148-157.
- Antico, L., & Brewer, J. (2025). Digital mindfulness training for burnout reduction in physicians: Clinician-driven approach. JMIR Formative Research, 9(1), e63197.
- Guille, C., & Sen, S. (2024). Burnout, depression, and diminished well-being among physicians. New England Journal of Medicine, 391(16), 1519–1527.