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Resource type: Peer-Reviewed Literature
Patients’ Use of Social Media Improves Doctor-Patient Relationship and Patient Well-Being: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in China

This research, performed by faculty at the Harbin Institute of Technology and City University of Hong Kong, examines online communities maintained by doctors, in...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Patient-Clinician Communication: American Society of Clinical Oncology Consensus Guideline

The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) published guidelines for oncology clinicians on effective use of communication to optimize the patient-clinician...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
A Patient-Centered Approach to Postgraduate Trainee Health and Wellness: an Applied Review and Health Care Delivery Model

Published in Academic Medicine, this literature review summarizes the healthcare needs of postgraduate medical trainees. Moreover, the authors discuss the...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Using Behavior Change Plans to Improve Medical Student Self-Care

This study, published in Academic Medicine, describes an innovative approach to teaching medical students the principles and practice of health behavior change and...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
A Brief Instrument to Assess Both Burnout and Professional Fulfillment in Physicians: Reliability and Validity, Including Correlation with Self-Reported Medical Errors, in a Sample of Resident and Practicing Physicians

Published in Academic Psychiatry, this study assesses the 16-item Professional Fulfillment Index (PFI). Principle component analysis concludes that PFI scales have...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Neurophysiological Markers of Emotion Processing in Burnout Syndrome

The growing amount of neurophysiological and neuroimaging research helps broaden existing knowledge of the neural mechanisms underlying core burnout components....

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Resilience Among Employed Physicians and Mid-Level Practitioners in Upstate New York

Published in Health Services Research, the study investigates factors associated with clinician resilience. The principal analysis found significant associations...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
Burnout and ‘Stress of Conscience’ Among Healthcare Personnel

The aim of this study is to examine the impact of moral strain on burnout. A model was developed using regression analysis explaining 59% of the variation in...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
On-Call Work and Physicians’ Well-Being: Testing the Potential Mediators

This research in Canadian Journal of Respiratory Theory discovers techniques used by ICU clinicians to develop intuition and foresight at change of shift report...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
On-call Work and Physicians’ Well-Being: Testing the Potential Mediators

On-call work has been associated with medical errors, injuries and lower clinician well-being. This study, published in Occupational Medicine, examines whether...

Peer-Reviewed Literature
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