RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To review evidence-based strategies that have been noted to improve professional fulfillment and reduce burnout by enhancing practice efficiency. DATA SOURCES: A comprehensive literature review was conducted to evaluate the strategies to improve efficiency of practice-a key driver of burnout among physicians. STUDY SELECTIONS: Studies of efficiency-enhancing practices relevant to allergy-immunology were included. RESULTS: Professional burnout is prevalent among physicians and is associated with negative outcomes affecting physicians, patients, and health care organizations. Recent surveys suggest at least 35% of US allergists-immunologists experience burnout. There are multiple drivers of professional burnout, some at the individual level and others at the organizational or practice level. Strategies to improve professional fulfillment may be conceptualized using the Stanford physician wellness framework, in which efforts target the following 3 reciprocal domains: culture, personal resilience, and practice efficiency. Organizational strategies that support physician well-being by creating a more efficient practice environment hold great promise, particularly for allergists-immunologists. The reduction of administrative burden and fostering of team-based care have been found in multiple studies to be cost-effective strategies to improve physician and patient satisfaction. CONCLUSION: To ensure the well-being of the US allergy-immunology workforce and optimize patient outcomes, both private and academic allergy-immunology institutions should prioritize the adoption and iterative evaluation and refinement of these strategies to cocreate an efficient and ideal practice environment.
Assuntos
Alergia e Imunologia , Esgotamento Profissional/prevenção & controle , Eficiência Organizacional , Cultura Organizacional , Médicos/psicologia , Humanos , Satisfação no Emprego , ProfissionalismoRESUMO
Anaphylaxis and urticaria are common presenting allergic complaints. Affecting up to 2% of the population, anaphylaxis is a serious, life-threatening allergic reaction. Although not life-threatening, urticaria is a rash of transient, erythematous, pruritic wheals that can be bothersome and affects up to 25% of the population. All cases of anaphylaxis warrant thorough clinical evaluation by the allergist-immunologist, although most cases of urticaria are self-limited and do not require specialist referral. This article offers an overview of our current knowledge on the epidemiology, pathogenesis, triggers, diagnosis, and treatment of anaphylaxis and urticaria.