# Relationship between socio-descriptive characteristics, burnout syndrome, and quality of life of employees

**Authors:** Natasa K. Rancic, Dejan R. Veljkovic, Momcilo R. Mirkovic, Ljiljana M. Kulic, Verica S. Jovanovic, Bojana N. Stamenkovic, Natasa S. Maksimovic, Vojislav M. Ciric, Emilija M. Marinkov-Zivkovic, Sonja D. Giljaca, Gordana Đorđevic, Ognjen G. Đorđevic, Marko M. Stojanovic, Novica Z. Bojanic, Dusan P. Miljkovic, Suzana A. Otasevic

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1277622 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2024-03-07

## TL;DR

This study explores how employee characteristics relate to burnout and quality of life in Serbia's private security sector.

## Contribution

It identifies specific socio-descriptive factors linked to burnout and quality of life among security employees.

## Key findings

- Female sex and older age are linked to higher burnout risk and emotional exhaustion.
- Managerial roles and higher education reduce burnout risk and improve personal achievement.
- Male sex and family status correlate with lower quality of life.

## Abstract

Burnout syndrome develops as a consequence of chronic stress among employees. The study objective was to examine what socio-descriptive characteristics of employees might be associated with the appearance of the occupational burnout and to evaluate the relationship between job burnout and the quality of life among security employees of the professional private security sector in Central Serbia.

A multicenter cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was performed. A multivariate logistic regression analysis and ANOVA post choc test was applied.

A total of 353 respondents (330 male and 23 female) participated in the study. Female sex and older age were associated with a higher risk of total burnout and the development of emotional exhaustion while male sex, higher education, and managerial position were associated with higher personal achievement and lower risk of total burnout. Male sex, marital union, two or more children, and direct contact with clients were significantly associated with a lower quality of life of employees. A significant negative correlation was found between total burnout and the Physical Health Composite Score (PHC) score with a correlation coefficient (rs) of −0.265 (95%CI from −0.361 to −0.163); between total burnout and the and Mental Health Composite Score (MHC) score with a rs of −0.391 (95%CI from −0.480 to −0.301); and between total burnout and TQL score with a rs of −0.351 (95%CI from −0.445 to −0.258).

Female sex and older age were associated with a higher risk of total burnout and the development of EE while a managerial position and higher education were protective factors in relation to the development of burnout. Male sex, marital union, two or more children, and direct contact with clients were significantly associated with a lower quality of life of the employees. Shift work significantly reduced the total quality of life, while managerial positions increased the quality of life.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Burnout syndrome (MESH:D002055), emotional exhaustion (MESH:D006359), EE (MESH:D057765)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

58 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10956698/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10956698