# Love, Compassion, and Personality as Predictors of Burnout in Nurses: A Path Analysis Study

**Authors:** Agapi L. Batiridou, Elena Dragioti, Zoe Konstanti, Stefanos Mantzoukas, Mary Gouva

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare14030404 · Healthcare · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

Nurses with higher compassion and positive personality traits experience less burnout, while neuroticism is linked to higher burnout levels.

## Contribution

This study identifies compassion and personality traits as key predictors of burnout in nurses, offering insights for targeted interventions.

## Key findings

- Neuroticism is strongly linked to higher burnout levels in nurses.
- Compassion is negatively associated with burnout dimensions like depersonalization.
- Extraversion is associated with higher professional accomplishment and lower depersonalization.

## Abstract

What are the main findings?
Compassion is negatively associated with burnout, while love-related emotions show additional but more limited associations with burnout dimensions.Personality traits are strongly associated with burnout, with higher neuroticism linked to greater burnout levels and positive personality traits associated with lower burnout.

Compassion is negatively associated with burnout, while love-related emotions show additional but more limited associations with burnout dimensions.

Personality traits are strongly associated with burnout, with higher neuroticism linked to greater burnout levels and positive personality traits associated with lower burnout.

What are the implications of the main findings?
Interventions aimed at enhancing compassion may be relevant for addressing depersonalization and professional accomplishment, thereby potentially supporting nurses’ well-being.Organizational strategies, such as improved shift scheduling and attention to individual vulnerability profiles (e.g., higher neuroticism), may be important considerations in efforts to address burnout-related risk factors.

Interventions aimed at enhancing compassion may be relevant for addressing depersonalization and professional accomplishment, thereby potentially supporting nurses’ well-being.

Organizational strategies, such as improved shift scheduling and attention to individual vulnerability profiles (e.g., higher neuroticism), may be important considerations in efforts to address burnout-related risk factors.

Background/Objectives: This study examined how personality traits, compassion, and love are associated with the three dimensions of burnout among nurses, while accounting for demographic factors such as gender, age, and work shift. Methods: A total of 403 nurses participated in this cross-sectional study and completed validated self-report measures of personality, compassionate love, and burnout, as well as an in-house, exploratory Love Instrument. Path analysis was used to examine patterns of direct and indirect associations among the study variables while controlling demographic covariates. Results: Men reported higher psychoticism and depersonalization, whereas women scored higher in compassion. Neuroticism was associated with greater emotional exhaustion and depersonalization and with lower personal accomplishment. Compassion showed indirect association patterns linking extraversion and the Lie scale with personal accomplishment and linking psychoticism with depersonalization. Extraversion was positively associated with accomplishment both directly and indirectly, while psychoticism was associated with higher depersonalization. Love-related variables showed mixed findings. Specifically, love experience was not associated with burnout, whereas love intensity was positively associated with both depersonalization and accomplishment. Older nurses reported more exhaustion but also greater accomplishment; male gender and rotating shifts were associated with higher depersonalization and exhaustion. Conclusions: The findings support neuroticism as a key dispositional vulnerability correlated with burnout and suggest that compassion and extraversion are linked to more favorable burnout-related profiles, particularly higher accomplishment and lower depersonalization. Love-related emotion intensity showed small, mixed associations and should be interpreted cautiously given the exploratory measurement approach. These results highlight the emotional complexity of nursing and may inform future research and workplace initiatives aimed at supporting occupational well-being.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Burnout (MESH:D002055)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

85 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12898037/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12898037