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  • Cambridge University Press (CUP)  (2)
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  • Cambridge University Press (CUP)  (2)
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  • 1
    In: European Psychiatry, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 32 ( 2016-02), p. 34-41
    Abstract: Postgraduate medical trainees experience high rates of burnout, but evidence regarding psychiatric trainees is missing. We aim to determine burnout rates among psychiatric trainees, and identify individual, educational and work-related factors associated with severe burnout. Methods In an online survey psychiatric trainees from 22 countries were asked to complete the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI-GS) and provide information on individual, educational and work-related parameters. Linear mixed models were used to predict the MBI-GS scores, and a generalized linear mixed model to predict severe burnout. Results This is the largest study on burnout and training conditions among psychiatric trainees to date. Complete data were obtained from 1980 out of 7625 approached trainees (26%; range 17.8–65.6%). Participants were 31.9 (SD 5.3) years old with 2.8 (SD 1.9) years of training. Severe burnout was found in 726 (36.7%) trainees. The risk was higher for trainees who were younger ( P 〈 0.001), without children ( P = 0.010), and had not opted for psychiatry as a first career choice ( P = 0.043). After adjustment for socio-demographic characteristics, years in training and country differences in burnout, severe burnout remained associated with long working hours ( P 〈 0.001), lack of supervision ( P 〈 0.001), and not having regular time to rest ( P = 0.001). Main findings were replicated in a sensitivity analysis with countries with response rate above 50%. Conclusions Besides previously described risk factors such as working hours and younger age, this is the first evidence of negative influence of lack of supervision and not opting for psychiatry as a first career choice on trainees’ burnout.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0924-9338 , 1778-3585
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 2016
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2005377-0
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  • 2
    In: Geological Magazine, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 141, No. 5 ( 2004-09), p. 629-643
    Abstract: Sedimentation ages of metamorphosed clastic sedimentary rocks in the southern Schwarzwald were determined by associations of palynomorphs. In the northern subunit of the Badenweiler–Lenzkirch Zone, two lithostratigraphic assemblages could be discerned in low-grade metamorphic units by their facies and age, thus revealing a more complex internal structure of this zone than previously assumed. Lower Ordovician metagreywackes and metapelites were discerned from Silurian metasiltstones. In the cataclastically overprinted metasiltstones and phyllites of the southern subunit of the Badenweiler–Lenzkirch Zone, only poorly preserved microfossil remains could be detected. These show that the sedimentation ages must be Ordovician or younger, but still probably Early Palaeozoic. High-grade metapelitic rocks of the South Schwarzwald Gneiss Complex contain chitinozoans in lenses and layers of schists, that are rich in biotite and graphite. They yielded mid-Silurian ages and show that this crystalline complex does not represent an older basement unit but was the result of marine sedimentation at that time. The new age determinations have a bearing on geodynamic reconstructions of the internal Variscides in Early Palaeozoic time. They show that sedimentation in the oceanic realm of the Badenweiler–Lenzkirch Zone or its margins did not occur before the Ordovician. After transformation of the northern passive into an active continental margin, younger greywackes not older than Middle Devonian received detritus from a volcanic arc, forming above the subduction zone.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0016-7568 , 1469-5081
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 2004
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 956405-6
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1479206-0
    SSG: 13
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