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The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series

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The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series. / Lim, K. H. J.; Murali, K.; Thorne, Eleanor et al.
In: ESMO Open, Vol. 7, No. 1, 100374, 28.02.2022.

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Harvard

Lim, KHJ, Murali, K, Thorne, E, Punie, K, Kamposioras, K, Oing, C, O'Connor, M, Elez, E, Amaral, T, Garrido, P, Lambertini, M, Devnani, B, Westphalen, CB, Morgan, G, Haanen, JBAG, Hardy, C & Banerjee, S 2022, 'The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series', ESMO Open, vol. 7, no. 1, 100374. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374

APA

Lim, K. H. J., Murali, K., Thorne, E., Punie, K., Kamposioras, K., Oing, C., O'Connor, M., Elez, E., Amaral, T., Garrido, P., Lambertini, M., Devnani, B., Westphalen, C. B., Morgan, G., Haanen, J. B. A. G., Hardy, C., & Banerjee, S. (2022). The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series. ESMO Open, 7(1), Article 100374. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374

Vancouver

Lim KHJ, Murali K, Thorne E, Punie K, Kamposioras K, Oing C et al. The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series. ESMO Open. 2022 Feb 28;7(1):100374. Epub 2022 Jan 8. doi: 10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374

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Bibtex

@article{377cd1c4042d40a2bd46f5db4754f553,
title = "The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on: lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series",
abstract = "Highlights • Risk of distress/burnout amongst oncology professionals continues to worsen since COVID-19 despite improved job performance. • Female and younger (≤40 years old) colleagues continue to be at higher risk of poor well-being and feeling burnout. • Job demands have increased, with nearly half now feeling overwhelmed with workload. • Concerns regarding career development/training, job security, and international fellowship opportunities remain high. • A quarter of oncology professionals reported considering changing their career, including leaving the oncology profession. Background COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the well-being and job performance of oncology professionals globally. The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Resilience Task Force collaboration set out to investigate and monitor well-being since COVID-19 in relation to work, lifestyle and support factors in oncology professionals 1 year on since the start of the pandemic. Methods An online, anonymous survey was conducted in February/March 2021 (Survey III). Key outcome variables included risk of poor well-being or distress (expanded Well-Being Index), feeling burnout (single item from expanded Well-Being Index), and job performance since COVID-19. Longitudinal analysis of responses to the series of three surveys since COVID-19 was carried out, and responses to job demands and resources questions were interrogated. SPSS V.26.0/V.27.0 and GraphPad Prism V9.0 were used for statistical analyses. Results Responses from 1269 participants from 104 countries were analysed in Survey III: 55% (n = 699/1269) female, 54% (n = 686/1269) >40 years, and 69% (n = 852/1230) of white ethnicity. There continues to be an increased risk of poor well-being or distress (n = 464/1169, 40%) and feeling burnout (n = 660/1169, 57%) compared with Survey I (25% and 38% respectively, P < 0.0001), despite improved job performance. Compared with the initial period of the pandemic, more participants report feeling overwhelmed with workload (45% versus 29%, P < 0.0001). There remain concerns about the negative impact of the pandemic on career development/training (43%), job security (37%). and international fellowship opportunities (76%). Alarmingly, 25% (n = 266/1086) are considering changing their future career with 38% (n = 100/266) contemplating leaving the profession. Conclusion Oncology professionals continue to face increased job demands. There is now significant concern regarding potential attrition in the oncology workforce. National and international stakeholders must act immediately and work closely with oncology professionals to draw up future-proof recovery plans.",
keywords = "well-being, burnout, job performance, oncology professionals, resilience, COVID-19",
author = "Lim, {K. H. J.} and K. Murali and Eleanor Thorne and Kevin Punie and Kostantinos Kamposioras and Christoph Oing and M. O'Connor and E. Elez and T. Amaral and Pilar Garrido and Matteo Lambertini and Bharti Devnani and Westphalen, {C. B.} and G. Morgan and Haanen, {J. B. A. G.} and Claire Hardy and Susana Banerjee",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "ESMO Open",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of COVID-19 on oncology professionals – one year on

T2 - lessons learned from the ESMO Resilience Task Force survey series

AU - Lim, K. H. J.

AU - Murali, K.

AU - Thorne, Eleanor

AU - Punie, Kevin

AU - Kamposioras, Kostantinos

AU - Oing, Christoph

AU - O'Connor, M.

AU - Elez, E.

AU - Amaral, T.

AU - Garrido, Pilar

AU - Lambertini, Matteo

AU - Devnani, Bharti

AU - Westphalen, C. B.

AU - Morgan, G.

AU - Haanen, J. B. A. G.

AU - Hardy, Claire

AU - Banerjee, Susana

PY - 2022/2/28

Y1 - 2022/2/28

N2 - Highlights • Risk of distress/burnout amongst oncology professionals continues to worsen since COVID-19 despite improved job performance. • Female and younger (≤40 years old) colleagues continue to be at higher risk of poor well-being and feeling burnout. • Job demands have increased, with nearly half now feeling overwhelmed with workload. • Concerns regarding career development/training, job security, and international fellowship opportunities remain high. • A quarter of oncology professionals reported considering changing their career, including leaving the oncology profession. Background COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the well-being and job performance of oncology professionals globally. The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Resilience Task Force collaboration set out to investigate and monitor well-being since COVID-19 in relation to work, lifestyle and support factors in oncology professionals 1 year on since the start of the pandemic. Methods An online, anonymous survey was conducted in February/March 2021 (Survey III). Key outcome variables included risk of poor well-being or distress (expanded Well-Being Index), feeling burnout (single item from expanded Well-Being Index), and job performance since COVID-19. Longitudinal analysis of responses to the series of three surveys since COVID-19 was carried out, and responses to job demands and resources questions were interrogated. SPSS V.26.0/V.27.0 and GraphPad Prism V9.0 were used for statistical analyses. Results Responses from 1269 participants from 104 countries were analysed in Survey III: 55% (n = 699/1269) female, 54% (n = 686/1269) >40 years, and 69% (n = 852/1230) of white ethnicity. There continues to be an increased risk of poor well-being or distress (n = 464/1169, 40%) and feeling burnout (n = 660/1169, 57%) compared with Survey I (25% and 38% respectively, P < 0.0001), despite improved job performance. Compared with the initial period of the pandemic, more participants report feeling overwhelmed with workload (45% versus 29%, P < 0.0001). There remain concerns about the negative impact of the pandemic on career development/training (43%), job security (37%). and international fellowship opportunities (76%). Alarmingly, 25% (n = 266/1086) are considering changing their future career with 38% (n = 100/266) contemplating leaving the profession. Conclusion Oncology professionals continue to face increased job demands. There is now significant concern regarding potential attrition in the oncology workforce. National and international stakeholders must act immediately and work closely with oncology professionals to draw up future-proof recovery plans.

AB - Highlights • Risk of distress/burnout amongst oncology professionals continues to worsen since COVID-19 despite improved job performance. • Female and younger (≤40 years old) colleagues continue to be at higher risk of poor well-being and feeling burnout. • Job demands have increased, with nearly half now feeling overwhelmed with workload. • Concerns regarding career development/training, job security, and international fellowship opportunities remain high. • A quarter of oncology professionals reported considering changing their career, including leaving the oncology profession. Background COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the well-being and job performance of oncology professionals globally. The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Resilience Task Force collaboration set out to investigate and monitor well-being since COVID-19 in relation to work, lifestyle and support factors in oncology professionals 1 year on since the start of the pandemic. Methods An online, anonymous survey was conducted in February/March 2021 (Survey III). Key outcome variables included risk of poor well-being or distress (expanded Well-Being Index), feeling burnout (single item from expanded Well-Being Index), and job performance since COVID-19. Longitudinal analysis of responses to the series of three surveys since COVID-19 was carried out, and responses to job demands and resources questions were interrogated. SPSS V.26.0/V.27.0 and GraphPad Prism V9.0 were used for statistical analyses. Results Responses from 1269 participants from 104 countries were analysed in Survey III: 55% (n = 699/1269) female, 54% (n = 686/1269) >40 years, and 69% (n = 852/1230) of white ethnicity. There continues to be an increased risk of poor well-being or distress (n = 464/1169, 40%) and feeling burnout (n = 660/1169, 57%) compared with Survey I (25% and 38% respectively, P < 0.0001), despite improved job performance. Compared with the initial period of the pandemic, more participants report feeling overwhelmed with workload (45% versus 29%, P < 0.0001). There remain concerns about the negative impact of the pandemic on career development/training (43%), job security (37%). and international fellowship opportunities (76%). Alarmingly, 25% (n = 266/1086) are considering changing their future career with 38% (n = 100/266) contemplating leaving the profession. Conclusion Oncology professionals continue to face increased job demands. There is now significant concern regarding potential attrition in the oncology workforce. National and international stakeholders must act immediately and work closely with oncology professionals to draw up future-proof recovery plans.

KW - well-being

KW - burnout

KW - job performance

KW - oncology professionals

KW - resilience

KW - COVID-19

U2 - 10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374

DO - 10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100374

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

JO - ESMO Open

JF - ESMO Open

IS - 1

M1 - 100374

ER -