Physicians’ job satisfaction, ethics and burnout in Makkah, Saudi Arabia

Authors

  • Leena Rashad Baghdadi
  • Razan Rashad Baghdadi
  • Ruqayyah Sami Kamal
  • Elaf Faisal Obaid
  • Maryam Farraj Aloqalaa
  • Tharaa Waleed Rambo
  • Julnar Ayman Al-Fahmi
  • Bayan Mutlaq Almasaoudi
  • Shahad Fuad Bin Afeef
  • Maryam Talal Abusalamah

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47391/JPMA.401

Abstract

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the frequency of job satisfaction, burnout and ethics among physicians across specialties with varied levels of experience and seniority, in hospitals in Makkah, Saudi Arabia.

Methods: From April-May 2016, job satisfaction, burnout and ethics were assessed in 136 physicians across specialties from six government hospitals in Makkah. Data collection was via a self-administered questionnaire. SPSS was used to obtain the likelihood ratio chi-square for all categorical bivariate statistical analyses. P value <0.05 was considered significant.

Results: A total of 136 physicians participated in the study. Sixty-nine percent physicians were male and 31% were female. Medical specialties varied between genders. There was no significant difference by gender, in job satisfaction among physicians (p-value 0.99). However, a high level of burnout was statistically significant among physicians (51%, p-value <0.0001) and the level of burnout was significantly higher among physicians willing to change their specialty compared to those willing to repeat it (50% vs. 24%, p-value 0.02). Physicians dissatisfied with their salary had double the scores of ethics compared to satisfied physicians. Female physicians were better at resolving ethical dilemmas.

Conclusion: This study provided the first evidence of high frequency of burnout and career choice regret among physicians working in Makkah, Saudi Arabia. Preventing physician burnout not only improves the quality of healthcare but also ensures patient safety.

Keywords: Physician satisfaction, ethics, burnout, work stress, loss of enthusiasm

Published

2020-09-28

How to Cite

Leena Rashad Baghdadi, Razan Rashad Baghdadi, Ruqayyah Sami Kamal, Elaf Faisal Obaid, Maryam Farraj Aloqalaa, Tharaa Waleed Rambo, Julnar Ayman Al-Fahmi, Bayan Mutlaq Almasaoudi, Shahad Fuad Bin Afeef, & Maryam Talal Abusalamah. (2020). Physicians’ job satisfaction, ethics and burnout in Makkah, Saudi Arabia. Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.47391/JPMA.401

Issue

Section

RESEARCH ARTICLE