A Peculiar Trend: Family Medicine Residents of Color are Less Burned Out

Jackson, Nicole; Wusu, Maria; Washington, Judy; Rodriguez, Jose

A Peculiar Trend: Family Medicine Residents of Color are Less Burned Out

Jackson, Nicole; Wusu, Maria; Washington, Judy; Rodriguez, Jose

Abstract

[This is an excerpt.] We were pleased to read the article by Davis et al examining the association between burnout and professional milestone attainment for family medicine resident physicians.1 We were very surprised by the finding that, in their study of over 2500 family medicine residents, Black, Latinx, and Asian family medicine residents experience burnout at lower rates than their White peers. It defies logic that residents who identify as Black, Indigenous, or a Person of Color (BIPOC) experience lower levels of burnout when they are differentially and systematically burdened by experiences of discrimination, microaggressions, and inequitable access to mentorship and structured opportunity and lack of belonging compared to their non-BIPOC colleagues.2- 4 In the discussion, the authors did not have room to explore why burnout trends show the opposite of what we would expect to see. We offer the following insights as to why these findings might be valid, and we would welcome discussion from the authors on this finding. [To read more, click View Resource.]

View Resource
Family Medicine
2023
Profession(s)
Physicians
Topic(s)
Burnout
Resource Types
Commentaries & Blogs
Study Type(s)
Expert Opinion, Commentary, etc.
Action Strategy Area(s)
Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
Setting(s)
Academic
Academic Role(s)
No items found.
No items found.