# The personal and the public in residents’ burnout: a cross-sectional investigation

**Authors:** Yehonatan Sonvani, Shoval Madmon Sarikov, Tony Gutentag

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13584-025-00742-z · Israel Journal of Health Policy Research · 2026-01-05

## TL;DR

This study explores how burnout among medical residents affects both their work and personal lives, showing how it spills over between different life domains.

## Contribution

The study introduces a holistic view of resident burnout, examining its interplay across work, relationships, and parenthood.

## Key findings

- Work-related burnout is linked to personal burnout and lower job satisfaction.
- Work-family conflict increases both work-related and personal burnout.
- Parental satisfaction is affected by all forms of burnout, showing a lack of domain-specificity.

## Abstract

Medical residents are especially prone to burnout. Burnout has historically been viewed as a work-related condition. Burnout also occurs in life domains other than work, such as relationships and parenthood. The present investigation takes a holistic view of resident burnout, considering both public (i.e., work-related) and personal (i.e., couple, parental) burnout. The present investigation examines the interplay between resident burnout in different life domains, their antecedent (i.e., work-family conflict), and outcomes (i.e., job, couple, and parental satisfaction; turnover and breakup intentions).

A pre-registered, cross-sectional study using questionnaires was conducted with 200 residents (M = 34.27 years, SD = 4.18; 63% female) in relationships and with children. We assessed work-related, couple, and parental burnout. The burnout antecedent was work-family conflict. The burnout outcomes included job, couple, and parental satisfaction, as well as turnover and breakup intentions.

As hypothesized, greater work-related burnout was associated with greater personal burnout. Work-family conflict was associated with higher levels of burnout, both work-related and personal. Higher work-related burnout was associated with lower job satisfaction and higher turnover intentions, showing domain-specificity. Higher couple burnout was associated with lower relationship satisfaction and higher breakup intentions, showing domain-specificity. Greater parental burnout was associated with lower parental satisfaction, as expected. However, this association was not domain-specific, contrary to the prediction: parental satisfaction was associated with all forms of burnout to the same extent (i.e., parental, couple, work-related).

The findings shed light on the less-spoken, personal aspect of resident burnout. Burnout was domain-specific in some life domains (i.e., work, romantic relationship) but also spilled over from one life domain into another (i.e., parenthood). These findings underscore the importance of adopting a holistic bio-psycho-social perspective on residents’ well-being. Resident well-being is not only an individual matter but also a strategic priority for building a resilient, high-performing, and sustainable health workforce.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** burnout (MESH:D002055)

## Full text

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## References

2 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766938/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766938