The Clinical Problem Solvers

Episode 426: Antiracism in Medicine – Episode 29 – Clinician Burnout, Racial Health Inequities & Reincorporating Rest into the Profession

Oct 29, 2025
In this discussion, Dr. Kriti Prasad, an internal medicine resident researching clinician burnout, teams up with Dr. Khaalisha Ajala, a hospital medicine professor and founder of A Tribe Called Health. They explore the toll of clinician burnout, emphasizing its links to racial health inequities and moral injury. The conversation reveals how COVID exacerbated these challenges and discusses actionable policy changes needed to support clinician wellbeing. They highlight the importance of reclaiming rest and fostering a healthier medical culture for better patient care.
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INSIGHT

Disproportionate Burnout In The Workforce

  • Nearly half of 20,000 healthcare workers reported burnout during COVID-19, with highest stress among women, Black/Latinx workers, and allied health staff.
  • Feeling valued by one's organization correlated with ~40% lower odds of burnout.
INSIGHT

Burnout Metrics Miss Racialized Stress

  • Traditional burnout measures may miss the effects of everyday racism and tokenization faced by marginalized clinicians.
  • Standard tools like the Maslach Inventory can under-detect burnout drivers unique to minoritized staff.
ADVICE

Make Workers Feel Valued

  • Organizations should prioritize interventions that make workers feel valued to reduce burnout risk.
  • Leaders can implement structural changes because perceived value lowered burnout odds by about 40%.
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