What the study found
Emotional exhaustion, a dimension of burnout, showed a stronger correlation with psychological distress than other burnout dimensions among U.S. postgraduate trainees, fellows, and students.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that targeted interventions are urgently needed to address environmental stressors within medical training.
What the researchers tested
The article reports a comprehensive meta-analysis of burnout and psychological distress across U.S. postgraduate trainees, fellows, and students. Meta-regression was used to examine whether students' disciplines, sample locations, and COVID-19 moderated the overall effect size.
What worked and what didn't
Emotional exhaustion demonstrated the strongest association with psychological distress. Meta-regression confirmed that students' disciplines, sample locations, and COVID-19 moderated the overall effect size.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not provide additional limitations or details beyond the moderators and overall association reported here.
Key points
- Emotional exhaustion had the strongest correlation with psychological distress.
- The analysis focused on U.S. postgraduate trainees, fellows, and students.
- Meta-regression found that students' disciplines, sample locations, and COVID-19 moderated the overall effect size.
- The authors call for targeted interventions to address environmental stressors within medical training.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Emotional exhaustion showed the strongest link to psychological distress
- Authors:
- Mohammad Jahanaray, Atena Pasha, Ali Jahanaray
- Institutions:
- Virginia Commonwealth University, Texas A&M University – Kingsville, Clemson University
- Publication date:
- 2026-01-28
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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