RT Journal Article T1 Characterization of Burnout Among Spanish Family Physicians Treating Fibromyalgia Patients: The EPIFFAC Study. A1 Torres, Xavier A1 Ojeda, Begoña A1 Collado, Antonio A1 Solé, Emília A1 Vergara, Jesús A1 Gómez, Emili A1 Castells, Xavier A1 Arias, Anna K1 Chronic Disease K1 Cluster Analysis K1 Cross-Sectional Studies K1 Depersonalization K1 Family Physicians K1 Fibromyalgia K1 Logistic Models K1 Pain Management K1 Patient Care Team K1 Primary Health Care K1 Professional Burnout K1 Risk Factors K1 Workload AB Burnout among physicians has increased, affecting not only doctors but also the quality of patient care. Treating challenging disorders, such as fibromyalgia, may increase the risk of feeling burned out. Health care of fibromyalgia patients is increasingly being assigned to family physicians. Therefore, we described the demographic characteristics, work contexts, component burnout scores (exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal accomplishment), and perceptions of fibromyalgia care of Spanish family medicine physicians with high and low levels of burnout. We then evaluated which of these variables were associated with having high or low levels of burnout. This cross-sectional study assessed 506 family physicians recruited from the Spanish Society of Family Physicians and randomly selected from Primary Health Care Centers. The subgrouping of family physicians based on their burnout scores was assessed by cluster analysis. Variables showing statistically significant differences between clusters and significance below 0.25 in univariate logistic regressions were assessed by multivariate logistic regression analysis. Family physicians reporting higher burnout scores (25%) felt that fibromyalgia patients on sick leave increased their workload, reported no support from nurses in the treatment of fibromyalgia patients, and had a more negative impression of fibromyalgia patients. One-quarter of family physicians reported feeling exhausted, detached from fibromyalgia patients, or less professionally accomplished. Several personal characteristics and contextual variables increased burnout. Several interventions to modify these variables and, thus, protect family physicians treating fibromyalgia from burnout are suggested. YR 2020 FD 2020 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/15601 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/15601 LA en DS RISalud RD Apr 7, 2025