Primary Care Practice Environment and Burnout Among Nurse Practitioners

Cilgy M. Abraham, Katherine Zheng, Allison A. Norful, Affan Ghaffari, Jianfang Liu, Lusine Poghosyan

Résultat de rechercheexamen par les pairs

31 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Poor practice environments contribute to burnout, but favorable environments containing support, resources, autonomy, and optimal relations with colleagues may prevent burnout. Compared with all nurse practitioners (NPs), 69% of these NPs provide primary care to patients, yet whether the practice environment is associated with NP burnout is unknown. A study to examine environmental factors related to NP burnout was conducted. Overall, 396 NPs completed the survey, and 25.3% were burnt-out. Higher scores on the professional visibility, NP-physician relations, NP-administration relations, independent practice, and support subscales were associated with 51%, 51%, 58%, and 56% lower risk of NP burnout, respectively.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)157-162
Nombre de pages6
JournalJournal for Nurse Practitioners
Volume17
Numéro de publication2
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - févr. 2021

Financement

Bailleurs de fondsNuméro du bailleur de fonds
Jonas Center for Nursing and Veterans Healthcare
National Institutes of Health National Institute on Minority Health and Health DisparitiesR01MD011514
Agency for Healthcare Research and QualityR36HS027290
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Advanced and Specialised Nursing

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