Healthcare professionals may find a renewed sense of purpose and reduced burnout by focusing on the positive impact of lifestyle medicine in their practice, according to a new study published in BMC Health Services Research. The research suggests that treating patients with lifestyle interventions – such as dietary changes, increased physical activity, and stress management – can increase job satisfaction, meaning, and a sense of effectiveness among clinicians.
The study, “Using Lifestyle Medicine to Treat Patients Can Reduce Practitioner Burnout: A Descriptive Model Derived from Healthcare Staff Interviews,” involved in-depth interviews with 42 healthcare professionals and administrators across five U.S. Health systems that have integrated lifestyle medicine programs into their care models. Participants included physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, psychologists, health coaches, and administrators.
Burnout, a pervasive issue in healthcare characterized by emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and a diminished sense of professional efficacy, has been linked to lower quality of care, reduced patient satisfaction, and increased staff turnover. Contributing factors often include heavy workloads, administrative burdens, and a perceived loss of autonomy. While previous research has established a correlation between practicing lifestyle medicine and lower burnout rates, this study delves into the underlying reasons for this connection.
Interviewees consistently reported higher job satisfaction following the implementation of lifestyle medicine programs. They cited witnessing meaningful improvements in patient health, empowering patients to take control of their well-being, and fostering stronger patient-clinician relationships as key factors. Crucially, many clinicians found that lifestyle medicine aligned with their original motivations for entering the healthcare field.
“Many participants described lifestyle medicine as the kind of care they originally hoped to practice when they entered health care,” explained lead author Bruce Weeks, MD. “Seeing patients improve, often with fewer medications and greater engagement in their own health, appeared to restore a sense of purpose and effectiveness for many clinicians.”
The study identified several specific factors that appeared to buffer against burnout. These included observing positive patient outcomes, increased patient satisfaction, a supportive work environment with colleagues who shared similar values, gratitude for organizational support of lifestyle medicine initiatives, and even improved staff health as clinicians applied lifestyle principles to their own lives.
Researchers developed a conceptual model illustrating how these factors relate to the three core dimensions of burnout. The model suggests that lifestyle medicine can help reduce exhaustion, decrease cynicism and detachment, and strengthen clinicians’ sense of professional accomplishment. This is achieved, in part, by restoring a sense of control and purpose in their work.
Lifestyle medicine is a growing medical specialty that utilizes therapeutic lifestyle interventions as a primary approach to treating and preventing chronic diseases. These interventions encompass a whole-food, plant-predominant eating pattern, regular physical activity, adequate restorative sleep, effective stress management techniques, strong social connections, and avoidance of risky substances. The goal is to address the root causes of chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and obesity, and, in some cases, even reverse them.
While the authors acknowledge that lifestyle medicine is not a panacea for burnout – and cannot address systemic issues like excessive workloads or administrative burdens – they suggest that organizational implementation of lifestyle medicine represents a promising systems-level approach that can benefit both patients and healthcare practitioners. It’s a shift towards a more proactive, preventative, and more rewarding model of care.
“Previous research has shown an association between practicing lifestyle medicine and lower levels of clinician burnout,” said Micaela Karlsen, PhD, Senior Director of Research at the American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM). “This study builds on that evidence by giving voice to clinicians and illuminating how meaningful patient outcomes, value-aligned care, and stronger patient-clinician relationships may help restore professional joy and purpose in healthcare practice.”
The ACLM has been actively involved in promoting lifestyle medicine education, providing over 1.2 million hours of training to physicians and other health professionals since 2004. The organization advocates for integrating lifestyle medicine into medical education, clinical practice, and reimbursement strategies, recognizing its potential to transform healthcare delivery.
