Assessment of Occupational Stress in Some Medical and Surgical Specialties

Background: In recent decades, attention was given increasingly to stress, especially to its secondary effects. Models were developed in response to stress to facilitate understanding of the pathology induced by stress. At the same time, methods to analyze the stress level by laboratory measurements or by means of questionnaires were favored.
Aim: To assess the incidence and the degree of the burn-out level in medics of different specialties.
Material and method: We ran a survey using a questionnaire to measure the level of burnout to the study group. We looked for correlations with coexisting factors, such as: age, addictions, time spent at work, on call time. Data were processed by Graph Pad Prism 5.
Results: The response rate was acceptable: 70 out of 80. We found a dominating medium degree of damage for the intensivists on poll position being the overall burnout. For the internists, there is no correlation between levels of training and fatigue factors, while the professional exhaustion is merely medium to low. The surgeons cope quite well, professional exhaustion being medium, significantly correlated with smoking. Couples face worse depersonalization when it comes to surgeons (p < 0.0048).
Conclusions: The occupational stress assessed by the Maslach questionnaire seems to be moderate to both anaesthetists and surgeons in the Tg. Mureş county hospital.

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