What’s been discovered within the realm of physician (and other healthcare professionals) wellbeing, is startling, to say the least. The healthcare industry can be highly toxic, resulting in unprecedented levels of depression, suicide, suicidal ideations, physician turnover, presenteeism, and general dissatisfaction with work and life. But the condition that precedes these and is most readily associated with physician wellbeing is burnout. This, above all, is what we must be working against in our field.
Read MoreWealth can be understood comprehensively as finances, money, debt, and the ability to be financially independent. Physicians spend on average ten years longer than the general population in obtaining education and training. Therefore, they have less time than the average worker to save money for retirement.
Read MoreToday we continue our discussion about the four domains of wellbeing. So far, we’ve explored both personal life and work life as separate domains. We’ve also begun thinking about how these domains interact with and affect each other. It’s easy to imagine how a personal crisis can affect an individual’s performance at work or how a work crisis can be more difficult to handle if one’s personal life is out of balance.
Read MoreLast post, we began our exploration of four separate domains of wellbeing. In order for an individual to truly thrive, attaining the top rung of the Ladder of Wellbeing, they must maintain either balance or outright success in all these domains.
Read MoreIn recent years, wellbeing has arrived as a science, complete with research and applications. But as a concept, it has existed for millennia. Religious leaders, poets, writers, and (in the last century) secular self-help experts have written about it ad nauseum. It’s no wonder our modern world is fascinated and mesmerized by the concept.
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