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Burnout Among Hospital Non-Healthcare Staff

Maëlys Clinchamps, Candy Guiguet‐Auclair, Denis Prunet, Daniela M. Pfabigan, François‐Xavier Lesage, Julien S. Baker, Lénise Parreira, Martial Mermillod, Laurent Gerbaud, Frédéric Dutheil

2020Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine25 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To study the prevalence of burnout among non-health care workers (NHCW), the risk and protective factors and to quantify the risk of burnout. METHOD: We conducted a cross-sectional study on the 3142 NHCW of the University Hospital of Clermont-Ferrand. They received a self-assessment questionnaire. RESULTS: Four hundred thirty seven (13.9%) NHCW completed the questionnaires. More than three quarter (75.4%) of NHCW was in burnout, with one in five (18.7%) having a severe burnout. Job demand was the main factor explaining the increase in exhaustion and overinvestment was the main factor explaining the increase in cynicism. Effort-reward imbalance (ERI) multiplied the risk of severe burnout by 11.2, job strain by 3.32 and isostrain by 3.74. CONCLUSION: NHCW from hospital staff are at high risk of burnout. The two major models of stress at work, the job demand-control-support and the ERI, were highly predictive of burnout, with strong dose-response relationships.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutCynicismMedicineJob strainOccupational burnoutWorkloadHealth careJob satisfactionQuarter (Canadian coin)NursingFamily medicinePsychologyClinical psychologyPsychiatryEmotional exhaustionSocial psychologyArchaeologyComputer scienceEconomicsOperating systemEconomic growthPolitical sciencePsychosocialHistoryPoliticsLawHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutNursing education and managementOccupational Health and Burnout
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