Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine (Apr 2017)

Effects of gaps in priorities between ideal and real lives on psychological burnout among academic faculty members at a medical university in Japan: a cross-sectional study

  • Yuki Chatani,
  • Kyoko Nomura,
  • Saki Horie,
  • Keisuke Takemoto,
  • Masumi Takeuchi,
  • Yukifumi Sasamori,
  • Shinichi Takenoshita,
  • Aya Murakami,
  • Haruko Hiraike,
  • Hiroko Okinaga,
  • Derek Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12199-017-0626-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Accumulating evidence from medical workforce research indicates that poor work/life balance and increased work/home conflict induce psychological distress. In this study we aim to examine the existence of a priority gap between ideal and real lives, and its association with psychological burnout among academic professionals. Methods This cross-sectional survey, conducted in 2014, included faculty members (228 men, 102 women) at a single medical university in Tokyo, Japan. The outcome of interest was psychological burnout, measured with a validated inventory. Discordance between ideal- and real-life priorities, based on participants’ responses (work, family, individual life, combinations thereof), was defined as a priority gap. Results The majority (64%) of participants chose “work” as the greatest priority in real life, but only 28% chose “work” as the greatest priority in their conception of an ideal life. Priority gaps were identified in 59.5% of respondents. A stepwise multivariable general linear model demonstrated that burnout scores were associated positively with respondents’ current position (P < 0.0018) and the presence of a priority gap (P < 0.0001), and negatively with the presence of social support (P < 0.0001). Among participants reporting priority gaps, burnout scores were significantly lower in those with children than in those with no children (P interaction = 0.011); no such trend was observed in participants with no priority gap. Conclusions A gap in priorities between an ideal and real life was associated with an increased risk of burnout, and the presence of children, which is a type of “family” social support, had a mitigating effect on burnout among those reporting priority gaps.

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