Categories: Press Release

Dr. Janice Crowder Calls on the Medical Community to Treat Physician Burnout as a Structural Crisis, Not a Personal One

  • New York-based OB-GYN Dr. Janice Crowder offers a practical framework for understanding and addressing burnout among physicians, with particular attention to women in medicine.

The Problem Is the System, Not the Physician

New York, USA, 14th May 2026, ZEX PR WIRE  For decades, physician burnout was framed as an individual issue — something a doctor managed privately, ideally without it affecting their performance. Dr. Janice Crowder, a board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist with more than thirty years of experience in women’s health, has joined a growing number of clinicians who are challenging that framing directly.

The premise of her argument is straightforward: the conditions that produce burnout are structural. Long hours, fragmented administrative demands, emotional intensity without adequate support, and a professional culture that equates self-sacrifice with dedication — these are not personal failures. They are institutional ones. Addressing burnout means addressing the systems that generate it.

Why Women Physicians Carry a Disproportionate Weight

Women physicians — and those in high-intensity specialties like obstetrics and gynecology — face particular pressures that compound the standard demands of clinical work. The emotional labor of navigating patient fear, grief, and vulnerability is not evenly distributed across specialties. Neither is the expectation that physicians remain fully present and fully functional without acknowledgment of what that costs.

Dr. Crowder has been clear that the physician who burns out does not only suffer personally. Patients lose continuity with someone they have learned to trust. Communities lose practitioners who may have taken years to establish presence. The downstream effects of physician attrition — particularly among women and physicians of color — are measurable in access to care.

A Framework for Sustainable Practice

Dr. Crowder has outlined several principles she believes should guide individual physicians and institutions alike. Physicians need explicit permission to name what they are experiencing — not as complaint, but as clinical data about a system under strain. Institutions need to measure burnout as a quality metric, not only an HR concern. Mentorship programs that address the psychological sustainability of medicine — not just technical advancement — are a missing component in many training environments.

The model of continued education and experience that has guided Dr. Crowder’s own career over thirty years is not simply about professional development. It is about maintaining the kind of engaged relationship with the work that makes long-term practice possible.

What Physicians and Institutions Can Do Now

Start by asking the question directly: what does sustainable practice look like, and are the current conditions supporting it? For individual physicians, that may mean reexamining the cultural scripts that define professional identity. For institutions, it means creating formal mechanisms — not voluntary wellness programs, but structural protections — that acknowledge the human limitations of those delivering care.

About Dr. Janice Crowder
Dr. Janice Crowder is a board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist and physician at Mainland Obstetrics and Gynecology Associates in Houston, Texas. She is based in New York, New York, where she continues to practice and advocate on issues affecting women’s health and physician wellbeing. She earned her MD from Howard University College of Medicine and has been recognized as America’s Top Obstetrician and Gynecologist and Houston’s Top Doc. Learn more at janicecrowder.com.

Zex PR Wire

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