Are Physicians the Canary in the Coal Mine of Medicine

by Dike Drummond

physicians are the canary in the coal mine of medicineAre Physicians the Canary in the Coal Mine of Medicine?

Back in the day, coal miners always carried a canary with them in a small cage whenever they would go down in the mine. The canary is a very talkative bird, always singing and tweeting in a constant background noise. Canaries have one more characteristic important to a miner.

When there is bad air in the mine, the canary’s sensitive lungs will cause it to drop over dead before the miners notice any shortness of breath. When the bird stops singing … the miners head for the surface … fast. It is a life saving maneuver.

Here in 2013 as we start to implement the provisions of Obamacare and projections of physician shortages as high as 91,500 by 2020 come from respected sources, I believe we have a similar “coal mine” situation in healthcare.

Unfortunately, physicians appear to be the canary in the mine.

Even before the pseudo-shortages of the Affordable Care Act, physicians were not in good shape. Symptomatic burnout is present in an average of one in three doctors on any given office day. A 2012 survey by the Physician’s Foundation reported that 60% of doctors would retire today if they “had the means”.

High patient volumes, the hassles of Electronic Medical Records (EMR), political uncertainty and changing reimbursement rates are all cited in surveys and online forums as new and increasing sources of stress for doctors.

The biggest new burnout threat may be Pay for Performance (P4P)

Healthcare organizations will soon be paid bonuses for reaching certain care quality indicators and patient satisfaction thresholds. Patient satisfaction is incredibly important and should be tracked and rewarded. At the same time, if care organizations simply use these reimbursement changes to dump more stress on the doctors they will actually block the doctor’s ability to be present and care for their patients more effectively. Where is the tipping point, where the canary falls off the perch?

How did we get here in the first place?

Healthcare is a classic giving profession. Doctors and nurses learn early that patients come first. Our job is to serve them as best we can, no matter how tired or drained we may be feeling. Their needs come before ours. Simply acknowledging our own needs is a challenge. Finding time and tools to get them met is a struggle for most physicians.

Healthcare organizations systemize this self care blind spot

It is rare for the physicians and staff to appear in the Mission Statement of a care organization. The patients and care quality will always be front and center in the mission. Any mention of the providers and staff is very rare.

[ Take a quick look at your organization’s Mission Statement. Does it mention provider or staff health, wellness and satisfaction? If so, is your organization actually doing something about it? ]

This creates a double bind where the providers are challenged to get their needs met and their organizations fail to acknowledge we have any in the first place.

The last American sweatshop  

As a result, many healthcare workplaces feel like a classic sweatshop environment. There are too many patients to be seen, multiple systems come between the doctor and patient (EMR for instance) there are quotas to be made and no regard whatsoever is paid to the health, wellness or stress levels of the physicians and staff.

The workplace resembles a mine. We are waiting for the physician/canary to drop.

In my work with doctors with career threatening burnout, it is common to hear of hospital departments and group practices where the entire staff is just barely making it through their work week.

Thank god for work hardening

The only reason these toxic workplaces don’t implode is the stamina and work ethic of the doctors and staff in the system. On one level, residency is a work hardening program for physicians. We can take a tremendous licking and keep on seeing patients. Our organizations know this and just pile it on.  The leaders count on the doctors to carry any load they pile on while taking no responsibility for the stress involved. It is just like putting a canary in a shaft where you know the air is bad and hoping it survives.

Everyone loses

Tragically, unless your group actually monitors for physician health and satisfaction, the toll burnout exacts on the doctors and their patients remains invisible.

Research shows burnout has a pervasive negative effect on every aspect of a physician’s practice and life. Physician burnout has been linked to
- Lower quality of care and lower patient satisfaction rates
- Higher rates of medical errors and malpractice risk
- Higher physician and staff turnover
- Higher levels of divorce, alcohol and drug use and suicide for the physician – our Canary.

So how much longer can we simply pile more and more stress on the doctors? When will this canary be stretched beyond its limit and simply topple off its perch and crash to the bottom of the cage? Does anyone care or is this something doctors just have to take care of on their own?

I believe there is a different path available to healthcare organizations. This path results in a win:win:win situation.

  • More patient satisfaction and higher quality care
  • Happier, healthier doctors
  • Higher profitability as the P4P trend continues

The key is to stop taking the canary down the mineshaft in the first place. Focus the same amount of effort on creating a healthy environment for your physicians and staff as you do on patient satisfaction for one simple reason.

Your doctors cannot produce consistently high patient satisfaction scores if they are not consistently healthy and happy at work. Happy doctors naturally have happier patients. Put the canary in a sunny window and change the papers in the bottom of her cage. This is a fundamental shift with positive consequences for everyone in healthcare.

physician burnout and physicians as the canary in the coal mine of medicine

I believe the most successful organizations in the near future will be those that acknowledge the universal presence of physician stress and burnout. They will monitor for burnout and support the health of their providers and staff in multiple innovative ways. They will put physician health and wellness in their mission statement as a priority equal to that of patient satisfaction. There are hundreds of proven ways for both physicians and organizations to make real and lasting changes in the physician experience as soon as this fundamental shift is recognized.

I also predict this type of organization will be rare. Leadership must stop simply loading on more work responsibilities and cracking the whip. Organizations must be committed to caring about the doctors and staff and constantly focused on creating a healthier and more efficient workplace.

With this new priority of physician wellness, these same organizations will be able to activate the power of a physician staff that is balanced and healthy, with their physical, emotional and spiritual needs met. This is the natural foundation for consistent quality care and patient satisfaction.

Just imagine a work environment … where you enjoy your work team and the practice environment, the systems work to let you care for patients smoothly and effectively and you know that your leadership “has your back” and really cares about the quality of your experience as a member of the group.  What would that be like?

Our healthcare workplaces don’t have feel like a coal mine. We don’t have to sit around and wait for the canary to drop.

PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT.
Do you work in a healthy workplace in an organization that cares for their physicians and staff?
Do you appear in  your organizations mission statement?
What is the biggest stressor in your practice that your group could change if they wanted to?

physician burnout prevention matrix free report


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  • Dr. Wes

    Dike –

    Your “don’t worry, be happy” model for health care organizations does nothing to fix the underling problems that burn out physicians: P4P measures, the “stick” of payment cuts if they are not followed even though they have nothing to do with the patient’s current concerns, the need to see more patients in less time to assure new patients access to care while not compromising existing patient care. This denial of reality has led to a growing culture of hostile dependency toward doctors by their own patients that threatens to break the very fiber of the doctor-patient relationship. Until doctors work to right many of these overburdening and unrealistic administrative wrongs, the canary will be doomed.

    • http://www.thehappymd.com/ Dike Drummond MD

      Hey Wes … not sure where you are getting “don’t worry, be happy from”. Please let me know what you are talking about. (unless you are just looking for the backlink, which I am happy to approve)

      Seems to me you and I are on the same page here. The stresses and unrealistic expectations of the typical organization are hurting everyone … doctors, staff, patients. And it does not have to be that way. Doctors can do many things to take care of their own needs, but if the workplace is a toxic environment … well that just does not make sense.

      I hear a lot of people like you saying “Doctors should do this and such to address these wrongs” sounding almost like union organizers. While doctors “should” do something and the situation needs changing … how does one get that accomplished? I say it is from within your organization. There are dozens of ways to improve the quality of your workplace once the leadership is bought into the concept of physician and staff wellness as a competitive advantage. I am focused on giving you the tools to actually make that change from within your organization.

      NOT don’t worry, be happy .. .OMG … are you kidding? I am talking about real tools that work in the real world and making real change.

      Download the MATRIX report here and let’s connect to see what is possible in your organization.

      http://www.thehappymd.com/physician-burnout-prevention-matrix/

      ~~ Dike

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  • Steven Koester M.D.

    Hi Dike,
    I have been receiving your e-mails for a couple months and want to say thanks for the help, encouragement and sense of camaraderie you provide. Medicine is still a great career but we need help in sorting out why some days it feels more weary than satisfying. We need to find ways to change our workdays so that we can spend more time doing patient care – the thing that most of us find most enjoyable. Keep brainstorming.
    Also, as a family physician, the recent trends in medicine [hopitalists, etc] have been isolating and there is less interaction among colleagues – a loss.Your comments help counter that isolation. Thanks again

    • http://www.thehappymd.com/ Dike Drummond MD

      Hey Steve … thanks for the lovely comments. Isolation is one of the defining characteristics of an over stressed doctor. We know that our friends don’t understand our experience – after all we are all “rich doctors”, what are we complaining about, That is why it is so important for us to support each other, look out for each other, have each other’s backs. Keep stopping by tell your colleagues to do the same. Have a great rest of your evening.
      ~ Dike