Burnout and perceived stress as predictors of quality of life in nurses
Alexandra Estrella Buitron Saavedra, Alessandra Cricel Quispe Caballero, Jonatan Baños Chaparro

TL;DR
The study shows that stress and burnout significantly lower the quality of life for nurses, especially registered nurses who face higher stress levels due to greater responsibilities.
Contribution
The study identifies negative stress as a significant predictor of mental health in nursing personnel using structural equation modeling and Bayesian analysis.
Findings
Negative stress is a statistically significant negative predictor of mental health (β = -0.59, p = 0.00).
Registered nurses reported higher levels of negative stress, depersonalization, and emotional exhaustion compared to nursing technicians.
Effective prevention strategies are needed to manage stress and burnout in clinical contexts.
Abstract
Burnout and perceived stress are prominent psychological problems manifested by nursing staff and substantially affect the quality of life and performance in daily activities of licensed nurses and nursing technicians. To analyze the influence of burnout and perceived stress on the quality of life of nursing personnel. Predictive, comparative, cross- sectional, quantitative study. A total of 450 participants (42.89% registered nurses and 57.11% nursing technicians) from a public military hospital completed psychological instruments and were recruited through non-probability convenience sampling. Structural equation modeling and Bayesian analysis were performed. The model demonstrated adequate fit, and negative stress (β = -0.59, p = 0.00) was identified as a statistically significant negative predictor of mental health. In addition, registered nurses reported higher levels of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStress and Burnout Research · Occupational Health and Burnout · Nursing care and research
