Emotional burnout in psychiatrists during the war: experience of Ukraine
N. O. Maruta, V. D. Mishiev, T. I. Levin, H. A. Prib, A. R. Markov

TL;DR
This paper examines emotional burnout in psychiatrists in Ukraine during the war, identifying risk factors and developing strategies to address it.
Contribution
The study introduces a mathematical model to predict and manage emotional burnout and professional maladaptation in psychiatrists during wartime.
Findings
69.2% of psychiatrists in Kyiv during the war showed varying degrees of emotional burnout.
Professional maladaptation is identified as the leading marker of emotional burnout.
A mathematical model successfully categorized psychiatrists into four risk groups for burnout and maladaptation.
Abstract
Psychiatrists being one of the significant groups associated with one of the highest risks of emotional burnout (EB). The risks of EB increase significantly in the conditions of war, which places increased demands on their physical, mental and psychological resources, and determines the relevance and necessity of studying the predictors, clinical phenomenology, psychological and psychopathological mechanisms of EB, and necessitates the development of innovative approaches to its corrections. The study the features of EB among psychiatrists in war period. The examination included the usage of clinical-psychopathological, psychodiagnostic and psychometric research methods. The study sample consisted of 120 psychiatrists who worked in Kyiv in the period from February 24, 2022, during 2022. 69.2 of psychiatrists working in Kyiv during the war have manifestations of EB of varying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical and Biological Sciences · History, Medicine, and Leadership
