• Revenue Cycle Management
  • COVID-19
  • Reimbursement
  • Diabetes Awareness Month
  • Risk Management
  • Patient Retention
  • Staffing
  • Medical Economics® 100th Anniversary
  • Coding and documentation
  • Business of Endocrinology
  • Telehealth
  • Physicians Financial News
  • Cybersecurity
  • Cardiovascular Clinical Consult
  • Locum Tenens, brought to you by LocumLife®
  • Weight Management
  • Business of Women's Health
  • Practice Efficiency
  • Finance and Wealth
  • EHRs
  • Remote Patient Monitoring
  • Sponsored Webinars
  • Medical Technology
  • Billing and collections
  • Acute Pain Management
  • Exclusive Content
  • Value-based Care
  • Business of Pediatrics
  • Concierge Medicine 2.0 by Castle Connolly Private Health Partners
  • Practice Growth
  • Concierge Medicine
  • Business of Cardiology
  • Implementing the Topcon Ocular Telehealth Platform
  • Malpractice
  • Influenza
  • Sexual Health
  • Chronic Conditions
  • Technology
  • Legal and Policy
  • Money
  • Opinion
  • Vaccines
  • Practice Management
  • Patient Relations
  • Careers

How one practice conquered burnout

Article

Three strategies for prevention of burnout

Two years ago, when Mission Health in Asheville, N.C., gave their standard employee engagement survey, only 17.5 percent reported being “fully engaged,” says Ronald A. Paulus, MD, Mission’s president and chief executive officer.

A year and a half later, 40 percent of employees reported being fully engaged. “It was a dramatic change,” says Paulus.

Mission achieved this by rolling out what Paulus describes as “a three-legged stool.”

While none of these three legs are perfect, they’ve had a profound impact on Mission Health’s burnout rates, which he compares to “light showing through the blinds.

 

RELATED READING: 9 ways to combat physician suicide

 

“I think the sense of movement creates hope, hope creates energy and energy creates problem-solving,” Paulus says.

 

Team engagement 

Paulus says the practice took to heart the advice that “you can separate out high-performing teams from low-performing teams by how frequently they interact, and how often individuals get to work in their areas of strength.”

Using an app, each team member checks in with his or her team leader at the beginning of every week. A team leader is not necessarily one’s boss, either. 

Each week, the team leader asks each team member three things: what they need from the team leader, what they loved about their week and what they loathed.

“That gives you insights into the highs and lows, and allows you to redirect people out of the lows,” Paulus says.

Then team members list their priorities for the week. The team leader might help them to change these if needed.

Lastly, they rate themselves on the following two characteristics:

  • How much value do I feel like I contributed last week?
  • How much did I get to work in my strengths last week?

This creates a kind of “real-time, concurrent view of an employee engagement survey,” Paulus says. This continuous feedback is the first and most important leg of the stool.

Next: Reduce hassles, increase joys

 

Reduce hassles, increase joys

Leg two, called “Mission Renew,” is about improving the work environment by shadowing employees to “collect and amalgamate their hassles and joys,” Paulus says. They do their best to eliminate hassles and “upscale” the joys.

In many cases, the hassles derive predominantly from information technology, such as EHR systems, but sometimes it’s a mundane problem such as, “this printer always has streaks on it.”

 

BLOG: Physicians must care for themselves to truly help others.

 

This part of the process reveals that people are not working where their strengths are, and Mission Health has created a path in its career development center aimed particularly at non-physicians to retrain people who love the company, but not their individual job responsibilities.

Resilience

The third and final leg of the stool revolves around helping staff cultivate “individual resilience.” It’s an approach Mission takes from a company called Life XT, a productivity program that works with various organizations.

LIfe XT’s founders wrote a book called “Start Here” that provides a prescription “using scientific evidence for resilience by drawing on common characteristics in other cultures such as meditation, gratitude and engagement in activities beyond the self,” Paulus says.

However, he makes clear that individuals are never left to figure it out on their own. 

“We try to look at all three legs because to put it all on the individual and say ‘You just need to become more resilient’ is sort of like blaming the person for the world being screwed up around them,” Paulus says. 

Related Videos