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‘Enough!’ We need to take back our profession; More unresolved questions about psychiatry

More unresolved questions about psychiatry

In Dr. Nasrallah’s August essay (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry. "Unresolved questions about the specialty lurk in the cortex of psychiatrists," p. 10,11,19,19A), he asks, as he often does, provocative, unanswered questions. There are probably many more questions to include in his list, but I’ll just add 1—the one that I think is the biggest problem in our field: Why is the burnout rate of physicians steadily climbing, to the extent that it exceeds the epidemic rate of 50%? Although you would think that we, as psychiatrists, should be expert at understanding and addressing this problem, our own burnout rate is >40%. Moreover, why haven’t we developed programs to prevent and reduce burnout, when other specialties, such as urology and emergency medicine, have done so?

H. Steven Moffic, MD

Retired Tenured Professor of Psychiatry
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Dr. Moffic is spot-on about the escalating rate of burnout among physicians, including psychiatrists. The reason I did not include burnout in the list of questions is because I intended to pose questions related to external forces that interfere with patient care. Burnout is a vicious internal typhoon of emotional turmoil that might be related to multiple idiosyncratic personal variables and only partially to frustrations in clinical practice.