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Burnout is seldom the result of a single factor. It is more often a tragic case of death by a thousand cuts: a balky user-unfriendly electronic medical record system, administrative pressure to see more patients and the resulting frustration of not being able to provide the care you feel they deserve, an overemphasis on documentation or you won’t get paid, the dark cloud of malpractice always overhead, and of course the difficult balance between family responsibilities and work. It often boils down to feeling that there aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything done and still have time to recharge your physical and psychological batteries.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

A recent report in the Harvard Business School newsletter, Working Knowledge (“Commuting Hurts Productivity and Your Best Talent Suffers Most.” Lane Lambert. 2021 Mar 30) describes an interesting study by Andy Wu, assistant professor of business administration, in which he discovered that, for every 10 kilometers of commuting distance, there was a decrease in the productivity of high-tech inventors as measured by the number of patents registered by their companies. The quality of their inventions declined even more (7%) for each additional 10 kilometers of commute.

You might question the relevance of these findings with your work in an outpatient clinic, but a conscientious physician is also an inventor and a creator. Every patient, even those with what sounds like a routine complaint, presents a novel collection of management challenges. The best physicians treat their profession as an art and must be invent solutions on the fly.

There is abundant evidence that commuting also can have a negative effect on the physical and mental health of workers. (“The astonishing human potential wasted on commutes.” The Washington Post .Christopher Ingraham. 2016 Feb 25). Watching my father walk into the house after an hour-long train ride out of the city and listening to him grumble created an image that influenced every decision I made about where my wife and I would live and work.

Did I benefit from the luxury of growing up in a small suburban community? Of course I did and I shall be forever grateful for the sacrifice my father made to allow that to happen. But, I promised myself that, while I would make sacrifices for my family, a long or unpleasant commute was not going to be on that list. For a few years I tolerated a 10- to 12-minute car commute (three stoplights) but asked to dissolve the partnership because even that 9-mile ride was too much for me and instead spent the bulk of my 40-year career a 10-minute bike ride from my office and the two hospitals. It meant we didn’t have a view of the ocean or a gentleman’s farm but we had an extra hour together as a family and I arrived at work and at home happy.

The pandemic has been a wake-up call for many of the fortunate folks who have found that they can work from home, eliminating what may have been a time-gobbling commute that was creating more stress than they may have realized. Even if telemedicine continues to maintain some postpandemic presence, I suspect that most physicians will continue to be faced with the challenge of traveling to an office or hospital.

If work is losing some of its luster and/or you are arriving home grumpy from a long day in the office, it is easy to blame an insensitive office administrator or the clunky electronic medical record system ... they deserve it. But, it may be the journey and not just the destination that is the contributing to the problem. I realize that rethinking the decision about where one lives can be painful and the options may be limited. However, I hope that at least some of you can rethink the role your journey is playing in your life.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

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Burnout is seldom the result of a single factor. It is more often a tragic case of death by a thousand cuts: a balky user-unfriendly electronic medical record system, administrative pressure to see more patients and the resulting frustration of not being able to provide the care you feel they deserve, an overemphasis on documentation or you won’t get paid, the dark cloud of malpractice always overhead, and of course the difficult balance between family responsibilities and work. It often boils down to feeling that there aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything done and still have time to recharge your physical and psychological batteries.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

A recent report in the Harvard Business School newsletter, Working Knowledge (“Commuting Hurts Productivity and Your Best Talent Suffers Most.” Lane Lambert. 2021 Mar 30) describes an interesting study by Andy Wu, assistant professor of business administration, in which he discovered that, for every 10 kilometers of commuting distance, there was a decrease in the productivity of high-tech inventors as measured by the number of patents registered by their companies. The quality of their inventions declined even more (7%) for each additional 10 kilometers of commute.

You might question the relevance of these findings with your work in an outpatient clinic, but a conscientious physician is also an inventor and a creator. Every patient, even those with what sounds like a routine complaint, presents a novel collection of management challenges. The best physicians treat their profession as an art and must be invent solutions on the fly.

There is abundant evidence that commuting also can have a negative effect on the physical and mental health of workers. (“The astonishing human potential wasted on commutes.” The Washington Post .Christopher Ingraham. 2016 Feb 25). Watching my father walk into the house after an hour-long train ride out of the city and listening to him grumble created an image that influenced every decision I made about where my wife and I would live and work.

Did I benefit from the luxury of growing up in a small suburban community? Of course I did and I shall be forever grateful for the sacrifice my father made to allow that to happen. But, I promised myself that, while I would make sacrifices for my family, a long or unpleasant commute was not going to be on that list. For a few years I tolerated a 10- to 12-minute car commute (three stoplights) but asked to dissolve the partnership because even that 9-mile ride was too much for me and instead spent the bulk of my 40-year career a 10-minute bike ride from my office and the two hospitals. It meant we didn’t have a view of the ocean or a gentleman’s farm but we had an extra hour together as a family and I arrived at work and at home happy.

The pandemic has been a wake-up call for many of the fortunate folks who have found that they can work from home, eliminating what may have been a time-gobbling commute that was creating more stress than they may have realized. Even if telemedicine continues to maintain some postpandemic presence, I suspect that most physicians will continue to be faced with the challenge of traveling to an office or hospital.

If work is losing some of its luster and/or you are arriving home grumpy from a long day in the office, it is easy to blame an insensitive office administrator or the clunky electronic medical record system ... they deserve it. But, it may be the journey and not just the destination that is the contributing to the problem. I realize that rethinking the decision about where one lives can be painful and the options may be limited. However, I hope that at least some of you can rethink the role your journey is playing in your life.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

Burnout is seldom the result of a single factor. It is more often a tragic case of death by a thousand cuts: a balky user-unfriendly electronic medical record system, administrative pressure to see more patients and the resulting frustration of not being able to provide the care you feel they deserve, an overemphasis on documentation or you won’t get paid, the dark cloud of malpractice always overhead, and of course the difficult balance between family responsibilities and work. It often boils down to feeling that there aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything done and still have time to recharge your physical and psychological batteries.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

A recent report in the Harvard Business School newsletter, Working Knowledge (“Commuting Hurts Productivity and Your Best Talent Suffers Most.” Lane Lambert. 2021 Mar 30) describes an interesting study by Andy Wu, assistant professor of business administration, in which he discovered that, for every 10 kilometers of commuting distance, there was a decrease in the productivity of high-tech inventors as measured by the number of patents registered by their companies. The quality of their inventions declined even more (7%) for each additional 10 kilometers of commute.

You might question the relevance of these findings with your work in an outpatient clinic, but a conscientious physician is also an inventor and a creator. Every patient, even those with what sounds like a routine complaint, presents a novel collection of management challenges. The best physicians treat their profession as an art and must be invent solutions on the fly.

There is abundant evidence that commuting also can have a negative effect on the physical and mental health of workers. (“The astonishing human potential wasted on commutes.” The Washington Post .Christopher Ingraham. 2016 Feb 25). Watching my father walk into the house after an hour-long train ride out of the city and listening to him grumble created an image that influenced every decision I made about where my wife and I would live and work.

Did I benefit from the luxury of growing up in a small suburban community? Of course I did and I shall be forever grateful for the sacrifice my father made to allow that to happen. But, I promised myself that, while I would make sacrifices for my family, a long or unpleasant commute was not going to be on that list. For a few years I tolerated a 10- to 12-minute car commute (three stoplights) but asked to dissolve the partnership because even that 9-mile ride was too much for me and instead spent the bulk of my 40-year career a 10-minute bike ride from my office and the two hospitals. It meant we didn’t have a view of the ocean or a gentleman’s farm but we had an extra hour together as a family and I arrived at work and at home happy.

The pandemic has been a wake-up call for many of the fortunate folks who have found that they can work from home, eliminating what may have been a time-gobbling commute that was creating more stress than they may have realized. Even if telemedicine continues to maintain some postpandemic presence, I suspect that most physicians will continue to be faced with the challenge of traveling to an office or hospital.

If work is losing some of its luster and/or you are arriving home grumpy from a long day in the office, it is easy to blame an insensitive office administrator or the clunky electronic medical record system ... they deserve it. But, it may be the journey and not just the destination that is the contributing to the problem. I realize that rethinking the decision about where one lives can be painful and the options may be limited. However, I hope that at least some of you can rethink the role your journey is playing in your life.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

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