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Health and Wellbeing

Healthcare Worker Burnout:
Decreasing Clinician Burnout Through Evidence-Based Approaches

The Thrive Study

Clinician burnout and job dissatisfaction are amongst the greatest challenges facing healthcare today. A recent call-to-action from the Office of the Surgeon General states that more than half of health workers report symptoms of burnout, and many are contending with insomnia, depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, or other mental health challenges. At Keck Medicine of USC, and hospitals around the country, these factors are contributing to an alarming number of departures from the healthcare workforce. For this reason, Keck Medicine of USC and its Care for the Caregiver program have partnered with USC Dornsife Public Exchange and the Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research to test a series of interventions that aim to increase wellbeing and address inefficiencies and dissatisfaction in the work environment. Ultimately, the study will inform support systems for caregivers at Keck, with a larger goal of developing a set of evidence-based approaches that can be utilized by hospitals around the country.

Study Approach

The study includes interventions in three key areas: Emotional Wellbeing, Electronic Medical Record (EMR) Skill Training, and Performance Improvement. Each intervention includes six sessions per participant, and will be delivered over a period of 12 weeks. Each participant will be assessed prior to, immediately following, and six months after completing their intervention sessions to determine the extent to which each intervention impacted them.

Emotional Wellbeing

Our wellbeing team at Keck will offer emotional wellbeing intervention sessions to frame and teach emotional health and resilience. Specifically, participants will learn to regulate their emotions using Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Acceptance Commitment Therapy to reduce anxiety, depression and frustration, while increasing resilience.

Electronic Health Record Skill Training

Members of the informatics team at Keck Medicine will offer EHR skill training intervention sessions focused on how care providers can optimize the EHR system for their practice specialty and setting. The goal of these sessions is for providers to both learn how to better utilize existing features of the EHR system and identify aspects of the system that can be improved to have collateral and sustained benefit for others.

Performance Improvement

The systems re-engineering team at Keck Medicine will provide performance improvement sessions to surface solutions that address the key challenges that care providers face in their daily work. The resulting process improvement recommendations will then be implemented and assessed for their impact on burnout, work satisfaction and retention.

Study Recruitment

This study is a Randomized Controlled Trial in which we will recruit clinicians from across the Keck Medicine of USC environment. The study aims to recruit 400 eligible care providers to participate.

Qualifying Criteria

In order to participate in the study, you must:

  • Be a Physician, PA, MA, Nurse (NP, RN, LVN), or Licensed Therapist (LCSW, MFT, LPCC, Clinical PhD, PsyD) who spends time working clinically in the Keck Medicine of USC environment
  • Be available to attend six intervention sessions (about 30 minutes every two weeks)
  • Complete three survey assessments

For more information regarding study recruitment, please email clinicianwellbeingstudy@usc.edu.

Incentives

Participants will be compensated up to $145 and be automatically entered to win a raffle of $1,500 to be used for professional development expenses.

 

To engage with the study team, please contact Public Exchange Senior Project Manager, Caroline Nguyen
cpnguyen@usc.edu

Project Team Members

Steven Siegel, MD, PhD
Principal Investigator
Keck Medicine of USC

John Brodhead, MD
Multiple Principal Investigator
Keck Medicine of USC

Doerte U. Junghaenel, PhD
Co-Investigator
Dornsife Center for Economic & Social Research

Lila Rabinovich, MPhil
Co-Investigator
Dornsife Center for Economic & Social Research

Jonathan Wong, PsyD
Clinical Director, Care for the Caregiver
Keck Medicine of USC

Dara Weinraub, MSW
Program Director, Care for the Caregiver
Keck Medicine of USC

Tiffany Nakamura, MA, LPCC
Caregiver Emotional Wellbeing Coordinator
Keck Medicine of USC

Felipe Osorno
Chief Post-Acute Care Officer and Chief of Staff
Keck Medicine of USC

Joan Brown, EdD, MBA, CCE
Assoc. Administrator, Care Transformation
Keck Medicine of USC

Sophia De-Oliveira, MPH
Process Architect, Care Transformation
Keck Medicine of USC

Gil Shlamovitz, MD, FACEP, FAMIA
Chief Medical Informatics Officer
Keck Medicine of USC

Jenny Horn, DNP, MHA, RN-BC
Sr. Director, Nursing Clinical Applications & Clinical Informatics
Keck Medicine of USC

Mary Louise Froissard
Assoc. Administrator, Clinical & Revenue Cycle Applications
Keck Medicine of USC

Michelle Brahe, RN
Clinical Informatics
Keck Medicine of USC

Renee Middleton
Clinical Informatics
Keck Medicine of USC

Catalina Ruple
Project Specialist
Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research

Sujeet Rao
Health & Wellbeing Practice Director
Public Exchange

Caroline Nguyen
Senior Project Manager
Public Exchange

The Thrive Study is part of a collaborative effort between Care for the Caregiver of Keck Medicine of USC, USC Dornsife Public Exchange, and the Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research.

 

The Thrive Study is sponsored by the UniHealth Foundation.