Litcius/Paper detail

Burnout Syndrome prevalence among nursing technicians of an Adult Intensive Care Unit

Michelle Cardoso e Cardozo, Sofia Louise Santin Barilli, Andréia Martins Specht, Noéli Daiãm Raymundo Herbert

2021Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: to verify Burnout Syndrome prevalence among nursing technicians of an adult Intensive Care Unit and associate prevalence with sociodemographic and clinical data. METHOD: a cross-sectional study carried out in an adult Intensive Care Unit of a large public hospital in southern Brazil, between March and April/2018. Prevalence was assessed using the Maslach Burnout Inventory. RESULTS: 122 nursing technicians participated (aged 39±2.5 years), 76% being women. Burnout Syndrome prevalence was 19.7% and 62.9%. There was a significant association between Burnout Syndrome and depression (p=0.004), as well as Burnout Syndrome and comorbidities (p=0.033), when less conservative criteria were adopted. CONCLUSION: the findings are relevant to professionals in this area and may contribute to adopting strategies to combat Burnout Syndrome.

Topics & Concepts

Burnout syndromeBurnoutMedicineIntensive care unitDepression (economics)NursingCross-sectional studyFamily medicinePsychiatryClinical psychologyMacroeconomicsEconomicsPathologyOccupational Health and BurnoutHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutStress and Burnout Research