Abstract

Burnout in nursing staff is a major cause for turnover and absenteeism. Identifying risk and protective factors may be helpful in decreasing burnout symptoms. Moreover, research indicates that ambulatory assessments of the autonomic nervous system might be helpful in detecting long-term stress and burnout symptoms. One hundred and ten forensic nursing staff members completed questionnaires measuring experiences with aggressive behaviour, emotional intelligence, personality, and job stress during four waves of data collection across a 2-year period. Multilevel analyses were used to test the predicted associations and moderation effects with (the development of) burnout symptoms. Burnout was predicted by a combination of emotional intelligence, job stress, aggression, personality factors, and skin conductance, but no moderation effects over time were found. Over a period of 2years, the model approximately predicts a change in one burnout category on the Maslach Burnout Inventory. The amount of burnout symptoms in nurses might be used as an indicator to predict turnover and absenteeism considering the increase in symptoms over time. Nursing staff who experience severe aggression and who have relatively low levels of emotional intelligence and altruism and high levels of neuroticism and job stress should be monitored and supported to decrease the risk of burnout. Staff members can be trained to increase their emotional intelligence and relieve stress to decrease their burnout symptoms and turnover and absenteeism on the long term. Ambulatory assessment might be helpful as a nonintrusive way to detect increasing levels of burnout.

Highlights

  • Several definitions of and causes for burnout have been proposed in recent years

  • This study aims to investigate the association between heart rate, skin conductance, and burnout in which the following research questions were investigated: 1. Are individual changes in burnout symptoms associated with job stress, emotional intelligence (EI), personality, and patient aggression over time? And, if so, do these variables moderate this association over time?

  • The repeated-measures variance is estimated at 0.93, with the subject-level variance at 1.88, which results in an ICC of 0.67 indicating that about two-thirds of the variance is explained at the subject level and one-third at the repeated-measures level

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Summary

Introduction

Several definitions of and causes for burnout have been proposed in recent years. Burnout is often referred to as a psychological syndrome in response to long-term job stressors (Johnson et al 2018; Leiter et al 2014; Maslach et al 2001; Schaufeli et al 2017). The emotionally demanding interpersonal relationship of professional. Peter de Looff, MSc. Robert Didden, PhD.

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