Predictors for Burnout Among Healthcare Workers in a Post -Covid Era
L. Lim, G. Heng, L. Loh, Y. H. Chan, L. Eng, C. Chan, J. Fam

TL;DR
This study explores factors predicting burnout among healthcare workers in Singapore, finding that younger workers and those with high psychological demands are at higher risk.
Contribution
The study identifies younger age, psychological job demands, and lack of decision latitude as significant predictors of burnout in healthcare workers.
Findings
Younger healthcare workers showed higher burnout scores.
Higher psychological demand and lower decision latitude and support were positively associated with burnout.
Anxiety and depressive symptoms were linked to increased burnout risk.
Abstract
We aimed to study predictive factors for burnout (BO) among healthcare workers in a tertiary hospital in Singapore. We hypothesized that burnout would be assoiciated with singles, females, and foreign born staff recently moved into this country, unaccompanied by family members. We further hypothesised that BO would be associated with those scoring less on resilience. Recognising that social support mitigated against stress and burnout, we hypothesized that those who perceived less support would be more prone to BO. The study questionnaire was sent via corporate email to all staff with email access. We stressed that data would be fully anonymised. No financial rewards were given for participation which was carried out on a voluntary basis. The following instruments were used, viz. F-SozU K-6, a brief form of the perceived social support questionnaire; Connor Davidson Resilience…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
