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student burnoutCU Anschutz Newsroom
•89% Informative
A new study led by a University of Colorado School of Medicine leader investigated whether the prevalence of burnout varied among different groups of students during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study found burnout risk did vary by gender, race and ethnicity, and sexual orientation.
It aligned with earlier research indicating that student burnout did not get appreciably worse through the early years of the deadly viral outbreak.
A generally higher risk of burnout among graduating medical students who identified as male, Asian , Black/African American , or of a sexual minority group.
Risk was lower among female, Hispanic , white, and heterosexual/straight students.
Dyrbye: Despite enormous stress during pandemic, burnout scores of medical students were stable through pandemic.
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