Burnout and Biological Biomarkers in Emergency and Acute-Care Healthcare Workers: A Systematic Scoping Review with Evidence Mapping
Mihai Alexandru Butoi, Vlad Ionut Belghiru, Monica Iuliana Puticiu, Raluca Tat, Adela Golea, Luciana Teodora Rotaru

TL;DR
This study reviews recent research on biological markers of burnout in emergency healthcare workers, finding inconsistent results due to factors like shift work and sleep loss.
Contribution
The study maps post-2018 evidence to assess whether reproducible biological correlates of burnout exist in emergency healthcare workers.
Findings
Biomarker studies focused mostly on cortisol, with fewer on heart rate variability and immune markers.
Associations with burnout were inconsistent and limited by poor adjustment for confounders like sleep.
Multi-system dysregulation was observed, sensitive to timing and contextual factors.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Burnout is highly prevalent among emergency and acute care healthcare workers (HCWs), yet biological correlates remain debated because candidate biomarkers are strongly shaped by circadian timing, shift work, sleep loss, and overlapping affective symptoms. We mapped post-2018 evidence of biological biomarkers assessed alongside validated burnout measures in emergency department (ED), emergency medical services (EMS), and related acute care settings. Specifically, we asked whether reproducible biological correlates of burnout can be identified in emergency and acute-care healthcare workers when biomarker endpoint class and sampling context are systematically considered. Materials and Methods: We conducted a systematic scoping review with evidence mapping (PRISMA-ScR). PubMed/MEDLINE and the MDPI platform were searched for English-language studies published from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout · Stress Responses and Cortisol · Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
