The use of an object: exploring physician burnout through object relations theory.


Journal

Medical humanities
ISSN: 1473-4265
Titre abrégé: Med Humanit
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 100959585

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Sep 2023
Historique:
accepted: 10 04 2020
medline: 28 8 2023
pubmed: 30 5 2020
entrez: 30 5 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The crisis of physician burnout has been widely and repeatedly reported across the mainstream press and medical journals around the world, in the closing years of the second decade of the 21st century. Despite multiple systematic reviews and commentary on the scale of this 'global epidemic', understandings of both the phenomenon and the most effective interventions remain limited. Practice-based medical humanities represents the collaborative sharing of conceptual tools for understanding illness and clinical practice and the shouldering of responsibility for mapping the shape of care, in all its local, national and global contexts, thinking-with rather than critique on the profession and its practices. In keeping with this approach, this article offers a new perspective on the contemporary crisis of physician burnout by exploring the objectification of the clinician's body within the systems and practice of healthcare. Within the context of medical humanities' scholarship, discussions of objectification usually navigate towards a discussion about patient identity and its potentially reductive objectification within the frameworks of biomedical science. However, this article crosses the cultural divide between clinician and patient, and comes to focus on the objectification of the clinician herself, using object relations theory from the field of psychoanalysis to excavate the psychodynamics of care and their impact on clinicians, and the systems of healthcare in which care is delivered.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32467301
pii: medhum-2019-011752
doi: 10.1136/medhum-2019-011752
pmc: PMC10511990
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

340-346

Informations de copyright

© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Competing interests: None declared.

Références

Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being. 2012 Aug 27;7:1-9
pubmed: 22943888
Open Med (Wars). 2018 Jul 04;13:253-263
pubmed: 29992189
BMJ. 2017 Jul 14;358:j3360
pubmed: 28710272
Int J Psychoanal. 1953;34(2):89-97
pubmed: 13061115
Med Humanit. 2018 Mar;44(1):55-58
pubmed: 28935631
Int J Psychoanal. 1969;50(2):129-32
pubmed: 4948271
JAMA. 2018 Sep 18;320(11):1131-1150
pubmed: 30326495

Auteurs

Jo Winning (J)

English, Theatre and Creative Writing, Birkbeck College, London WC1H 0PD, UK j.winning@bbk.ac.uk.

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Classifications MeSH