Surgeon, Heal Thyself: Optimising Surgical Performance by Managing Stress
Uttam Shiralkar
September 1, 2017
180 Pages
€36.48 +Vat
Features
- The first book to focus on stress and burnout among surgeons, an acutely relevant subject in the current climate of shortened surgical training and workforce pressures
- Discusses a universal yet taboo phenomenon that is often not acknowledged or discussed
- Highly relevant to surgeons across all specialities and at all levels, from trainee through to experienced practitioner
- From the author of two successful books: Smart Surgeons, Sharp Decisions(2011, winner of a BMA Book Award) and Cognitive Simulation: Techniques to Enhance Surgical Skills (2013)
Summary
Surgeons start their career in the expectation that it will bring personal satisfaction through an unparalleled sense of achievement and professional growth. Nonetheless, a career in surgery carries with it serious challenges: surgical training is rigorous, both emotionally and physically, and demands that the surgeon adjust to unpredictability. Chronic levels of stress can affect surgical performance, the quality of family relationships, and even the nature of the doctor–patient relationship. Unmanaged stress has been shown to contribute to physical illness, emotional problems, absenteeism, poor job performance, drug abuse, and negative social attitudes.
With a background in both surgery and psychological medicine, Dr Shiralkar examines the psychosocial burden of being a surgeon and offers insights into the role of intra-human factors in surgery. He reveals surgical performance from a psychological perspective and highlights the factors that cause unsatisfactory performance. He also offers solutions to rectify the problem and prevent burnout. The book will be invaluable to all those embarking on a surgical career, as well as to established surgeons in all specialties who wish to understand how to identify and manage the factors that could lead to career-limiting levels of stress.
Table of Contents
Anatomy of a surgeon. Psychosocial toll of a surgical career. Operating theatre – a place where the surgeon acts while stress plays a role. Coping with stress – how, how far and how long. When things go wrong. Burnout – the silent killer. Banishing Burnout