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A Bio-Physio-Psychological Investigation of Athletes’ Burnout

Shamsi S. Monfared, Jean-Charles Lebeau, Justin Mason, Seong Kwan Cho, Itay Basevitch, Inbal Perry, Daniel Baur, Gershon Tenenbaum

2020Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose: Changes in biophysiological markers related to perceived burnout and self-comfort were tested in this study. Method: Forty-two student-athletes from middle and high school grades were evaluated for burnout, salivary cortisol levels, measures of arousal-related physiological markers (i.e., blood volume pulse; BVP), galvanic skin response (GSR), and respiratory rate, and self-comfort variables during the last two weeks of the season. Using self-comfort theory as its conceptual framework, we examined burnout through a conceptual model in which feeling of discomfort with the self was related to biophysiological markers affecting perceived burnout. The proposed model was tested by using a partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM). Results: The main findings indicate that increased self-discomfort is significantly (p < .001) associated with increased salivary cortisol (β = – 0.189) along with a significant (p = .050) decrease in GSR (β = – 0.259). Increased salivary cortisol is significantly (p < .001) associated with increased burnout (β = 0.242). Conclusion: The findings partially support the model and encourage further effort to capture the burnout syndrome through the integration of biological and psychological markers.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutStructural equation modelingPsychologyAthletesArousalFeelingClinical psychologyPsychophysiologyCardiorespiratory fitnessDevelopmental psychologyPhysiologyMedicinePhysical therapySocial psychologyPsychiatryMathematicsStatisticsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutPerfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety StudiesHealthcare Education and Workforce Issues
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