Characteristics of Occupational Burnout among Nurses of Various Specialties and in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic—Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Study Selection
2.4. Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Overview of Studies
3.2. Measurements and Tools
3.3. Study Outcome
3.4. Key Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year | Sample | Age | Place | Measure | Prevalence of Burnout | Predictors of Burnout |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Department of Neurology or Neurosurgery | ||||||
Bąk et al., 2018 [12] | 110 nurses | N/A | filled in the ward | ADQ, the Japanese Questionnaire | - the incidence rate of fatigue symptoms, mean ± SD—69.3 ± 68.33 |
|
Purvis et al., 2019 [17] | 65 Neurosciences Critical Care Unit Staff—49 (75%) nurses, 75% female | mean ± SD—34 ± 10 | the survey online | aMBI | - emotional exhaustion, median (IQR)—8 (6–11) -depersonalization, median (IQR)—3 (IQR 0–6) - personal accomplishment, median (IQR)—15 (IQR 13–16) -high emotional exhaustion—45% (n = 29) - high depersonalization—28% (n = 18) of participants |
|
Fargen et al., 2020 [30] | 129 nurses and 109 technologists | N/A | the survey online | MBI-HSS MP | - emotional exhaustion, median (IQR)—25 (15–35) - depersonalization, median (IQR)—6 (2–11), - personal accomplishment, median (IQR)—39 (35–43) -the burnout prevalence in nurse—50% - the burnout prevalence in technologists—53% |
|
Saposnik et al., 2022 [19] | 96 nurses, 91.7% female | mean ± SD—44.6 ± 9.8 | the survey online | MBI-HSS | - severe burnout—16.7% - depressive symptoms—13.5% |
|
Ślusarz et al., 2022 [13] | 206 nurses, 95.1% female | ≥25 years | self-filled in the ward | ADQ | - work-related burnout—32% - colleague-related burnout—44.2% - patient-related burnout—22.8% |
|
Intensive care unit | ||||||
Kim and Yeom, 2018 [34] | 318 nurses, 97.2% female | mean ± SD—29.79 ± 5.71 | self-filled survey (collected in sealed envelopes) | Burnout Questionnaire | - the mean burnout score—3.18 out of 5 (range 1.65–5) - physical burnout—3.43 ± 0.63 - emotional burnout—3.28 ± 0.49 - psychological burnout—2.87 ± 0.56 |
|
See et al., 2018 [18] | 3100 nurses | N/A | the survey online | MBI-HSS | - overall high burnout—52.0% - emotional exhaustion subscale, score range 0–54, mean ±SD—25.4 ± 11.2 -depersonalization subscale, score range 0–30, mean ± SD—9.0 ± 6.3 - personal accomplishment subscale, score range 0–48, mean ± SD—32.5 ± 9.0 |
|
Vasconcelos et al., 2018 [20] | 91 nurses, 89.0% female | mean ± SD—30.82 ± 6.42 | data collection was done by the researcher, during the participants’ working hours | MBI-HSS, BDI | - burnout—14.3%, - symptoms of depression—11.0% |
|
Alvares et al., 2020 [21] | 125 nurses, 90.6% female | mean ± SD—36.5 ± 8.2 | interview | MBI-HSS | - burnout syndrome, according to the criteria of Grunfeld—44.7% - high emotional exhaustion—25% - high depersonalization—20% - high reduced personal accomplishment—7.8% |
|
Möller et al., 2021 [24] | - 180 professionals in the public hospital—138 nursing technicians and 42 nurses - 116 professionals in the private hospital—94 nursing technicians and 22 nurses; >60% female | - public hospital: nurses- 40.4 ± 8.0, nursing technicians- 44.26 ± 7.78 - private hospital: nurses- 34.1 ± 4.4, nursing technicians—38.01 ± 7.38 | N/A | MBI | BURNOUT -public hospital: nurses—2.5%, nursing technicians—9.1% - private hospital: nurses—9.5%, nursing technicians—8.5% NURSES -in public hospital: professional fulfillment—31.1 ± 3.3, emotional exhaustion—20.8 ± 5.1, depersonalization—8.10 ± 2.64, in private hospital: professional fulfillment—29.8 ± 3.5, emotional exhaustion—23.8 ± 4.6, depersonalization—8.68 ± 2.59 NURSING TECHNICIANS - in public hospital: professional fulfillment—32.25 ± 3.47, emotional exhaustion—19.74 ± 6.10, depersonalization—8.00 ± 2.65, in private hospital: professional fulfillment—32.96 ± 3.43, emotional exhaustion—18.15 ± 4.88, depersonalization—7.79 ± 2.71 | N/A |
Burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||
Teo et al., 2021 [31] | 2744, 60% nurses (90% female) | 34.75 | the survey online | PSS-4-, GAD-7, Physician Work Life Scale | - job burnout—27% - stress—36% - anxiety—14% |
|
Andlib et al., 2022 [22] | 288 nurses, 76.7% female | mean ± SD—27.7 ± 4.4 | self-filled survey at their convenient time and handed them over to their nurse managers | MBI-HSS, STOP-D | - overall burnout—48.6% - high levels of emotional exhaustion—37.2% - depersonalization—36.8% -low levels of personal accomplishment—46.9% - depression—45.5% - anxiety—48.6% - stress—47.2% - anger—43.7% |
|
Kim and Lee, 2022 [25] | 111 nurses, 94.6% female | Age: 20 years—54.1%, 30 s—28.8%, 40 s—10.8%, 50 s—6.3% | the survey online | PHQ-9, GAD-7, IES-R, MBI | - burnout—44.1% - emotional exhaustion—36.9% -depersonalization—29.7% - personal accomplishment—36% - depression—31.5% - anxiety—8.1% - distress—23.4% |
|
Guttormson et al., 2022 [32] | 488 nurses, 88.1% female | 20–30 years—39.3%, 31–40 s—28.7%, 41–50 s—13.7%, 51–60 s—13.3%, >60 s—4.9% | the survey online | PROQOL-5, TSQ, PHQ-ADS | - moderate levels of burnout (Mdn. 30, range 10 to 44; 84.7% moderate levels) - moderate to severe anxiety—31.1% - moderate to severe depression—44.6% - risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder—46.7% |
|
Howie-Esquivel et al., 2022 [33] | 101 nurses, 93% female | mean ± SD—50.2 ± 10.8 | the survey online | CBI, WRQoL | - personal burnout, mean ± SD—51.7 ± 21.9 - work-related burnout, mean ± SD—50.1 ± 27.8 - client (patient)-related burnout, mean ± SD—27.6 ± 21.3 |
|
Geriatric ward | ||||||
Potard and Landais, 2021 [26] | 279 nurses and care assistants, 98.6% female | mean ± SD—36.00 ± 10.47 | the survey online | MBI | - personal accomplishment, mean ± SD—38.74 ± 6.20, moderate burnout—21.86%, high burnout—31.9% - depersonalization, mean ± SD—7.34 ± 6.10, moderate burnout- 26.7%, high burnout—23.85% - emotional exhaustion, mean ± SD—22.61 ± 11.37, moderate burnout—27.55%, high burnout—34.41% |
|
Wang et al., 2019 [23] | 1212 nurses, 84% female | mean ± SD—49.16 ± 10.41 | one-on-one interviews | MBI-HSS | - job burnout, mean ± SD—3.58 ± 2.55 - emotional exhaustion, mean ± SD—1.32 ± 1.12 - depersonalization, mean ± SD—0.76 ± 0.94 - reduced personal accomplishment, mean ± SD—1.50 ± 1.3 |
|
Sarabia-Cobo et al., 2021 [2] | 281 nurses, 91% female | mean ± SD—36.8 ± 5.4 | the survey online | AAQ-II, MBI, ProQOL | - burnout, mean ± SD—26.71 ± 7.23 - emotional exhaustion—high levels—37.2%, medium levels—47.6% - depersonalization—high levels—21.8% - performance at work—high levels—26.6%, medium levels—34.8% |
|
Iecovich and Avivi, 2017 [28] | 154 nurses, 74% female | mean ± SD—42.08 ± 11.00 | self-administered questionnaire | MBI | burnout, mean ± SD—56.99 ± 18.07 |
|
Mantzorou et al., 2020 [29] | 171 nurses and professional caregivers, 84.2% female | mean ± SD—37.5 ± 11.5 | self-administered questionnaire | MBI | - emotional exhaustion—high level—29.2%, medium level—29.8% - depersonalization—high level—11.1%, medium level—25.1% - personal accomplishments—high level—35.1%, medium level—36.3% |
|
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Ślusarz, R.; Cwiekala-Lewis, K.; Wysokiński, M.; Filipska-Blejder, K.; Fidecki, W.; Biercewicz, M. Characteristics of Occupational Burnout among Nurses of Various Specialties and in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic—Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 13775. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192113775
Ślusarz R, Cwiekala-Lewis K, Wysokiński M, Filipska-Blejder K, Fidecki W, Biercewicz M. Characteristics of Occupational Burnout among Nurses of Various Specialties and in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic—Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(21):13775. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192113775
Chicago/Turabian StyleŚlusarz, Robert, Klaudia Cwiekala-Lewis, Mariusz Wysokiński, Karolina Filipska-Blejder, Wiesław Fidecki, and Monika Biercewicz. 2022. "Characteristics of Occupational Burnout among Nurses of Various Specialties and in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic—Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 21: 13775. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192113775
APA StyleŚlusarz, R., Cwiekala-Lewis, K., Wysokiński, M., Filipska-Blejder, K., Fidecki, W., & Biercewicz, M. (2022). Characteristics of Occupational Burnout among Nurses of Various Specialties and in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic—Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(21), 13775. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192113775