As burnout continues to afflict the world’s clinicians, IT leaders are stepping up with a fresh commitment to digital transformation.
The well-being and mental health of clinicians is the responsibility of all stakeholders, and IT leaders have a unique opportunity to support them during challenging times.
The World Health Organization (WHO) found that at least one out of every four healthcare workers in 2022 reported symptoms of anxiety, depression, and burnout. Burnout is a particular challenge, affecting an estimated 41% to 52% of healthcare workers — with higher risk found among women, young people, and parents of dependent children. But IT leadership can turn this into an opportunity today — investing to help increase efficiency and reduce administrative burden.
Success will require tools and strategies that are optimized for both clinicians and patients and seamlessly integrated into provider workflows across all settings.
The promise of professional well-being starts with human centered design and the learning organization
A systems approach can be a useful tool for IT leaders addressing clinician burnout. The book, Taking Action Against Clinician Burnout: A Systems Approach to Professional Well-Being, presents a framework that stresses human-centered design and the importance of learning at the organizational level — two core perspectives that align with the IT leaders’ potential role in reducing administrative burnout through modernization of clinical workflows.
Human centered design is foundational to clinician health
Work systems should align with the needs of clinicians to ensure they are healthy, usable, and safe.
Human centered design requires the involvement and participation of clinicians from design, to technology implementation, to IT governance — incorporating their inputs in a systemic work system redesign. In the IT sphere, this means involving care teams at all levels in evaluating solutions and anticipating the effects on the work system as a whole — individuals, technology, tasks, as well as the organizational and physical work environments.