10 Ways Healthcare Providers Can Tackle Burnout and Improve Self-Care
Laura M. Cascella, MA, CPHRM
Burnout in healthcare is rampant, and it is not limited to one clinical setting or a particular type of provider. Rather, feelings of exhaustion, cynicism, pessimism, detachment, and ineffectiveness can take a grip on healthcare providers of various ages, backgrounds, and specialties — and they can have far-reaching consequences.
A recent Medscape survey found that almost half (47 percent) of doctors suffer from burnout, and almost a quarter (24 percent) deal with depression.1 Nurse burnout rates are even worse; 65 percent of nurses report experiencing stress and burnout, and only 60 percent would choose nursing as their career again.2
The factors that contribute to burnout — much like its symptoms and outcomes — are wide-ranging and vary for individuals. At a broad level, contributing factors include inefficient workflows, suboptimal technology, administrative and regulatory burdens, workforce shortages, excessive workloads, loss of autonomy, shifting values, and organizational culture.
The consensus view is that burnout is triggered by decisions and factors that mostly are beyond healthcare providers’ control and often conflict with their values and moral code. “Regulatory and institutional policies, payer requirements, and intrusive, difficult technologies all challenge the basic ethical motivations that are essential to professional fulfillment of the human beings who are central to high-quality patient care.”3
Healthcare providers might feel helpless to effect change at the macro level required to significantly diminish burnout. Yet, research suggests that self-care and individual efforts to address burnout and promote wellness are an essential part of an overall strategy for tackling this pervasive problem. A NEJM Catalyst report explains, “Clinicians cannot resolve these complex issues on their own, but neither are they helpless victims. Until structural changes are deployed, individual mitigation strategies can be effective.”4
Below are 10 strategies and recommendations for healthcare providers to consider as part of an individual approach for tackling burnout. Although this list is not all-inclusive or designed to provide a universal solution, the recommendations can help practitioners proactively establish a plan of action for improving personal well-being, increasing resiliency, and reducing the detrimental effects of burnout.
- Consider the basic components of a healthy lifestyle — such as diet/nutrition, physical activity, and sleep patterns — and how you’re managing in each area. Determine whether adjustments can help improve your overall physical and mental well-being. Changes do not necessarily need to be significant or immediate; incremental changes can have a significant and lasting impact.
- Commit to following through with routine healthcare screenings/exams and seeking care for physical and mental health concerns that arise. Take stock of whether symptoms associated with burnout are leading to increased dependency on alcohol or other substances, and seek help to address these issues.
- Learn techniques and methods that encourage relaxation, decrease stress, and improve mental and physical well-being. Examples of these activities may include yoga, tai chi, deep breathing, journaling, and meditation. If these traditional stress-relieving strategies aren’t helpful, consider other alternatives. For some people, high-impact activities or hobbies might help relieve stress better than low-impact pursuits.
- Participate in wellness initiatives and peer support programs within your practice setting; if none exist, consider starting a committee or program that focuses on improving wellness and resiliency. Small practices that have fewer resources might want to consider designating “wellness champions” who promote resources to improve well-being, model wellness behaviors, and encourage other employees to address issues associated with burnout.
- Work on establishing reasonable boundaries related to personal and professional expectations and commitments, including learning negotiation strategies and recognizing limitations. Identify personal habits and professional influences that disrupt work–life balance and develop strategies for managing them (for example, not checking work email while vacationing or not spending excessive time discussing or focusing on work during personal or family time).
- Consider initiating or participating in discussions with organizational leaders and decision-makers about work-related strategies to address burnout, such as flexible scheduling, use of support staff, outsourcing of administrative tasks, technology improvements, and other methods to reduce workload burdens and workflow inefficiencies.
- Support efforts to enhance team building and communication within your practice setting through in-person meetings, huddles, social networking, and collaborative care. Increased interaction and collaboration can facilitate learning, promote shared responsibility, foster a supportive environment, and strengthen connections with colleagues.
- Take time to focus on the purpose and value of the work done within your practice. Recognize individual and group accomplishments, positive feedback from patients and peers, the meaningful impact that healthcare professionals have on communities, and inspiring patient stories.
- Make sure to include time in your schedule for activities that help you recharge mentally and physically, such as trips, hobbies, and time with family and friends. Data suggest that more than 60 percent of Americans do not use all their vacation time.5
- Perform periodic self “check-ins” to assess your physical and mental well-being and identify signs of burnout. As part of these check-ins, consider new and persistent factors that are contributing to feelings of burnout and barriers that make addressing these factors difficult. Consider strategies that have helped reduce burnout previously as well as new and innovative ways that you can address well-being and resiliency.6
Although burnout is a complex syndrome with no universal solution, researchers continue to look for new and novel strategies to address this problem and mitigate its negative consequences. These strategies will likely involve approaches that attempt to identify solutions at individual, organizational, and industry levels to produce lasting improvements. As research develops, providers should stay alert to best practices and new methods that support personal resiliency and well-being and align with the delivery of high-quality care.
For more information about organizational approaches for addressing the burnout epidemic, see MedPro’s article Five Ways Healthcare Organizations Can Confront Burnout and Foster Well-Being. For more general information on this topic, see MedPro’s Risk Resources: Burnout in Healthcare.
Endnotes
1 McKenna, J. (2025, January 31). ‘If boundaries are set, it is possible’: Medscape Physician Mental Health & Well-Being Report 2025. Medscape. Retrieved from www.medscape.com/slideshow/2024-Physician-Mental-Health-6017854
2 Cross Country. (2025). Beyond the bedside: The state of nursing in 2025. Retrieved from www.crosscountry.com/beyondthebedside
3 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2019). Taking action against clinician burnout: A systems approach to professional well-being. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi:https://doi.org/10.17226/25521
4 Swensen, S., Strongwater, S., & Seth Mohta, N. (2018, April). Leadership survey: Immunization against burnout. NEJM Catalyst. Retrieved from https://catalyst.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/CAT.18.0209
5 Hardy, A. (2024, July 24). American workers are letting a third of their vacation time go to waste: Report. Money. Retrieved from https://money.com/workers-unused-vacation-time-pto-survey/
6 Swensen, et al., Leadership survey: Immunization against burnout; Linzer, M., & Guzman-Corrales, L. (2015, June 5). Physician burnout: Improve physician satisfaction and patient outcomes. AMA STEPS Forward. Retrieved from https://edhub.ama-assn.org/steps-forward/module/2702509; Brower, K. (2016, April 22). Avoid burnout with self-care and wellness strategies. Psychiatric Times, 33(4). Retrieved from www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/avoid-burnout-self-care-and-wellness-strategies; Sagaram, D., & Hughes, F. (2020, September 14). Physician burnout and self-care. Contemporary OB/GYN. Retrieved from www.contemporaryobgyn.net/view/physician-burnout-and-self-care; Porter, S. (2019, December 4). Residency innovation creates path to physician well-being. AAFP News. Retrieved from www.aafp.org/news/focus-on-physician-well-being/20191204wellbeingstudy.html; Pierce, R. G., Maples, W. J., Krippner, J., Sexton, J. B., Adams, P., Amerson, T., . . . Duffy, M. B. (2021). Results from the National Taskforce for Humanity in Healthcare’s integrated, organizational pilot program to improve well-being. Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety, 47(9), 581–590. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcjq.2021.05.010; Carrau, D., & Janis, J. E. (2021). Physician burnout: Solutions for individuals and organizations. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 9(2), e3418. doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000003418
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