
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Burnout is an ongoing part of many physicians' lives, and for some it can even lead to suicide. This part of Medscape's Lifestyle Report looks at how often cardiologists experience burnout, as well as how happy they are in their personal lives and how they spend their time outside of work.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Working as a cardiologist often entails frustration and challenges. Compared with other specialists, cardiologists are about in the middle of the pack. Only 27% of cardiologists in Medscape's survey responded that they were very or extremely happy.
Some totals in this presentation do not equal 100% due to rounding.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
In general, all physicians are happier outside of work than at work, including cardiologists. Almost half of cardiologists are either very or extremely happy outside of work.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
The percentage of cardiologists who are burned out is about the same as that of burned-out physicians overall (44%). Cardiologists' rates of reported colloquial and clinical depression are almost the same as those of physicians overall (11% and 4%, respectively).
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Cardiologists are more likely to use positive coping skills—like exercise, enjoying music, and talking with friends and family—to deal with burnout rather than turning to potentially destructive behaviors. Among all physicians, exercise was the chief method of coping with burnout (48%).
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Many factors lead to burnout, but the major ones include having too many administrative tasks, more time devoted to the EHR, spending too many hours at work, and lack of respect from administrators, colleagues, or staff.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Of those cardiologists who say that they are depressed, more than half believe that it has no impact on patient interactions. Those who do admit that patient care is affected cite possibly being less careful when taking patient notes and feeling more exasperated with patients.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Depression's effects are not limited to patient interactions. For many depressed cardiologists, the condition expresses itself in some aspect of their work behavior.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Eleven percent of cardiologists who are burned out, depressed, or both admitted to having had thoughts of suicide. That's somewhat lower than the percentage of all such physicians who said they had had suicidal thoughts (14%) or had attempted suicide (1%).
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
The majority of cardiologists don't seek help. Many physicians have rationalized their exhaustion and discontent, noting that other physicians feel it too. Others say they don't think their degree of unhappiness is bad enough to require outside help.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Increasingly, hospitals and large healthcare organizations offer physician wellness programs for reducing stress and burnout. Cardiologists who noted that their employer did not offer such a program, or that they didn't know whether a program was available at their workplace, were split about how likely they would be to use one were it offered.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
More than half of cardiologists (59%) describe their self-esteem as high or very high. Our survey results show that self-esteem varies within the specialties: Plastic surgeons (73%), urologists (68%), and ophthalmologists (67%) have among the highest self-esteem, while internists (50%), oncologists (48%), and infectious disease specialists (47%) come in at the bottom of that scale.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Cardiologists are similar to all physicians in that the large majority are married or in a committed relationship. The percentage of single cardiologists (3%) is lower than the overall physician average of 7%.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Overall, 84% of physicians say their marriage is either good or very good. For cardiologists, that percentage is 78%. Among physicians who describe their marriage as very good, cardiologists, at 47%, are toward the low end of the scale, along with anesthesiologists (47%) and psychiatrists (45%). Happiest are otolaryngologists (67%), plastic surgeons (64%), and urologists (64%).
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Cardiologists spend about the same amount of time as physicians overall (70% of whom spend 1-10 hours) on personal use of the Internet. Data from USC Annenberg found that the average American spends 24 hours online a week, up from 9.4 hours in 2000.[1]
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
The majority of cardiologists spend from 1 to 10 hours per week on the Internet for professional use. Twenty-nine percent spend 11 hours or more per week online for work-related purposes, compared with 22% of physicians overall.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
For cardiologists, BMW, Lexus, and Toyota are among the top makes. For physicians overall, the top two are Toyota and Honda, followed by BMW, Ford, Lexus, and Mercedes-Benz.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
More than a third of cardiologists take from 3 to 4 weeks of vacation, while about another third (36%) take 5 weeks or more. Overall, 43% of physicians take from 3 to 4 weeks of vacation annually, and 23% take 5 weeks or more.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Among all physicians in our survey, 70% say they have a spiritual or religious belief, fairly similar to the percentage of cardiologists. In Medscape's 2012 Lifestyle Report, 83% of physicians said they have a belief system.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
Among all physicians, 35% exercise at least four times a week, just over a third exercise two or three times a week, and just under a third exercise once a week or less (including never). A similar percentage of cardiologists (34%) exercise at least four times a week.
Medscape Cardiologist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report 2019
About 43% of cardiologists average less than one drink per week or are non-drinkers. For physicians overall, that figure is 47%. Among all physicians, 8% have at least seven drinks per week, compared with 10% of cardiologists.
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