Los Angeles Times

Our exhausting medical system

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Re “What we owe front-line health workers,” Opinion, March 5

Dr. Victor J. Dzau’s op-ed article is excellent, but it begs for more attention to the root causes of burnout among healthcare profession­als.

Dzau writes, “We need a national strategy, not only to help healthcare workers recover from the pandemic, but also to mitigate preexistin­g drivers of burnout.” Many of us are convinced that those “preexistin­g drivers of burnout” are the long-standing structural, systemic problems embedded in our unnecessar­ily expensive and too-often harmful U.S. healthcare system.

For any strategy to successful­ly address burnout, it must include recognitio­n and repair of those structural, systemic problems, which include the following: the toxic priority of profit before health; the demands of informatio­n and administra­tive overload that are relentless, intolerabl­e and functionim­pairing; and the inadequate attention to prevention, social disparitie­s, racism and injustice. Robert S. Vinetz, M.D.

Los Angeles

Dzau suggests we need to track the well-being of clinicians because burnout has increased due to the pandemic.

However, what we need is not to track burnout — which has already been well documented — but to fix our healthcare system, which is the underlying cause of this burnout. We need to replace our chaotic patchwork of public and private for-profit insurers with a single-payer system that covers everyone with comprehens­ive benefits.

We also need to use a more functional electronic medical record. That will dramatical­ly reduce administra­tive and digital hassles for doctors and decrease burnout. Nancy Greep

Los Angeles

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