Burnout among public health physicians and residents in Canada following the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-sectional study
Syeda Aiman Fatima, Xi Yu Hao, Diana Sun, Itai Malkin, Elizabeth Alvarez, Laura N. Anderson, David Edward-Ooi Poon, Japteg Singh, Emma Apatu, Chris P. Verschoor, Thomas Piggott, Emily Belita, Sheila A. Boamah, Arielle Sutton, Zayya Zendo, Jessica P. Hopkins

TL;DR
This study finds that burnout remains high among Canadian public health physicians and residents a year after the pandemic, linked to depression, anxiety, and low job satisfaction.
Contribution
The study provides updated data on burnout prevalence and its correlates in public health physicians post-pandemic in Canada.
Findings
63.6% of physicians reported burnout using the Oldenburg Burnout Inventory.
Low professional fulfillment was strongly associated with burnout (OR 12.5).
41.2% of physicians experienced threats, assaults, or bullying during the pandemic.
Abstract
Previous research identified high levels of burnout in the Canadian public health workforce during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study presents the prevalence of burnout, associated participant demographic and workplace characteristics, and associated secondary outcomes among Canadian public health physicians and residents one year after the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were collected using an online survey distributed through Canadian public health associations and professional networks between April and May 2024. Validated tools were used to measure burnout (Oldenburg Burnout Inventory (OLBI)), screen for anxiety (GAD-2) and depression (PHQ-2), and professional fulfillment (Stanford Professional Fulfillment Index). Additional binary (yes/no) questions were asked on workplace safety topics (e.g., threats, assaults, being bullied) and professional plans. Fisher’s exact test and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPublic Health Policies and Education · Healthcare professionals’ stress and burnout · COVID-19 and Mental Health
