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Burnout among Health Care Professionals during COVID-19

Siw Tone Innstrand

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The present study examined organizational, situational (i.e., COVID-19-related), and psychological factors associated with burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic among 268 health care professionals in Norway. A total burnout score based on the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT), the four core BAT subscales (i.e., Exhaustion, Mental Distance, Cognitive Impairment, and Emotional Impairment), and the COVID-19 Burnout Scale served as the dependent variable. Among the results, organizational factors such as work-home conflict, workload, and role conflict were positively related to burnout. Although autonomy and colleague support were negatively related to burnout, support from leaders was positively related to it, which might suggest a suppressive effect. Organizational factors explained most of the variance in general burnout (i.e., BAT Total), whereas situational (i.e., COVID-19-related) factors (e.g., involvement with COVID-19, fear of COVID-19, and COVID-19-induced stress) seemed to better explain COVID-19 burnout. COVID-19-oriented actions were related only to Mental Distance. Psychological factors such as meaning were negatively related to BAT Total, Exhaustion, and Mental Distance, whereas a breach of the psychological contract was related to all subscales. Such results suggest that organizational and situational factors contribute differently to general and COVID-19 burnout and that administering pandemic-specific assessment tools can clarify how the pandemic has affected mental health.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutEmotional exhaustionWorkloadPsychologyMental healthAutonomySituational ethicsClinical psychologyPandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Scale (ratio)MedicineSocial psychologyPsychiatryDiseasePathologyLawPolitical scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)Quantum mechanicsComputer scienceOperating systemPhysicsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutCOVID-19 and Mental HealthStress and Burnout Research
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