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  • Book
    edited by Sheila LoboPrabhu, Richard F. Summers, H. Steven Moffic.
    Summary: "Combating Physician Burnout: A Guide for Psychiatrists aims to educate psychiatrists about three key concepts: stress, burnout, and physician impairment. Five sections lay out the scope of the challenge and outline potential interventions. The introduction discusses the history and social context of burnout and provides psychiatrists who may be struggling with burnout with much-needed perspective. Subsequent sections discuss the potential effects of burnout on clinical care, contextual elements that may contribute to burnout, potential systemic and individual interventions, and the moral challenge burnout poses to psychiatry"-- Provided by publisher.

    Contents:
    The History of Burnout in Society, Medicine, and Psychiatry
    The Social Context of Physician Burnout
    Identifying the Continuum of Stress and Burnout
    Understanding Burnout and its Potential Effects on Clinical Care
    From Burnout to Impairment : The Slippery Slope
    Physician Depression and Suicide
    U.S. Physicians and Work-Home Conflict
    Electronic Health Records and Physician Burnout
    Physician Satisfaction and Burnout at Various Career Stages
    Burnout among Medical Students and Residents
    A Model for Maintaining Well-Being and Preventing Burnout for Psychiatrists
    Psychiatrist Burnout : Prevention and Intervention
    The Role of Health System Innovation in Preventing Psychiatrist Burnout
    Establishing and Maintaining Proportional Authority, Responsibility, and Expertise to Prevent Burnout
    Well-being, Professionalism, and the Ethics of Resilience.
  • Article
    Delia S, Russo V, Sebastiani A, Sorice F.
    Boll Ist Sieroter Milan. 1978 Mar 31;57(1):46-53.
    A microplate method of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was adapted for the demonstration of antibodies to influenza A and B in 25 paired acute and convalescent sera taken from patients with influenza A infection, in 11 single convalescent sera collected from patients with acute respiratory infection and serological evidence of influenza B infection, in 14 paired sera collected from volunteers who were vaccinated with an aqueous inactivated influenza A and B vaccine, and in 15 serum samples from normal subjects. Comparison showed that ELISA was more sensitive than the hemagglutination-inhibition test. The enzyme-immunoassay gave equally reliable and reproducible results and requires very small amounts of antigen and sera. This simple test may be suitable for use in large seroepidemiological surveys.
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