Litcius/Paper detail

Frenetic, under-Challenged, and Worn-out Burnout Subtypes among Brazilian Primary Care Personnel: Validation of the Brazilian “Burnout Clinical Subtype Questionnaire” (BCSQ-36/BCSQ-12)

Marcelo Demarzo, Javier García‐Campayo, David Martínez‐Rubio, Adrián Pérez‐Aranda, João Luiz Miraglia, Márcio Sussumu Hirayama, Vera Morais Antonio de Salvo, Karen Cicuto, Maria Lúcia Favarato, Vinícius Demarchi Silva Terra, Marcelo Batista de Oliveira, Mauro Garcı́a-Toro, Marta Modrego‐Alarcón, Jesús Montero‐Marín

2020International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Primary healthcare personnel show high levels of burnout. A new model of burnout has been developed to distinguish three subtypes: frenetic, under-challenged, and worn-out, which are characterized as overwhelmed, under-stimulated, and disengaged at work, respectively. The aim of this study was to assess the psychometric properties of the long/short Brazilian versions of the "Burnout Clinical Subtypes Questionnaire" (BCSQ-36/BCSQ-12) among Brazilian primary healthcare staff and its possible associations with other psychological health-related outcomes. An online cross-sectional study conducted among 407 Brazilian primary healthcare personnel was developed. Participants answered a Brazil-specific survey including the BCSQ-36/BCSQ-12, "Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey", "Utrecht Work Engagement Scale", "Hospital Anxiety/Depression Scale", "Positive-Negative Affect Schedule", and a Visual Analogue Scale of guilt at work. The bifactor was the model with the best fit to the data using the BCSQ-36, which allowed a general factor for each subtype. The three-correlated factors model fit better to the BCSQ-12. Internal consistence was appropriate, and the convergence between the long-short versions was high. The pattern of relationships between the burnout subtypes and the psychological outcomes suggested a progressive deterioration from the frenetic to the under-challenged and worn-out. In sum, the Brazilian BCSQ-36/BCSQ-12 showed appropriate psychometrics to be used in primary healthcare personnel.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutScale (ratio)AnxietyHealth careMedicineEmotional exhaustionClinical psychologyCross-sectional studyDepersonalizationPsychologyFamily medicinePsychiatryPathologyEconomicsQuantum mechanicsEconomic growthPhysicsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutOccupational Health and BurnoutWorkplace Health and Well-being