Abstract

BackgroundJob stress and emotional exhaustion have been shown to have a negative impact on the helping professional. The development and causal relations of job stress and emotional exhaustion are rather unclear in the chiropractic profession. The objective of this study is to understand the main sources of occupational stress and emotional exhaustion among doctors of chiropractic.MethodsAnalysis of the written responses to web-based open-ended questionnaire was performed using an interpretive research methodology. Additionally, cross tabulation and Chi square statistical tests were conducted to match and couple the demographic data with the categorical themes.ResultsFourteen professional stress categories emerged from the 970 completed surveys. “Managed Care Organization regulation”, “Managed Care reimbursement” and “Scope of Practice Issues” were the most common stressors that negatively influenced chiropractors’ professional and personal lives. The results of the categorical analysis suggests that age, marital status, number of years in practice and location of practice may have an influence on the category of stress reported by chiropractors.ConclusionsThe qualitative approach revealed common, conventional and culture-specific job stressors in doctors of chiropractic. Notably, these findings suggest an association between third-party payer influences (increased regulation/decreased reimbursement) with that of increased job stress. Further research will be undertaken to refine the stress and satisfaction parameters and address stress interventions.

Highlights

  • Job stress and emotional exhaustion have been shown to have a negative impact on the helping professional

  • McManus et al [16] suggest that emotional exhaustion (EE) and occupational stress may have reciprocal causation – that is, high levels of Williams Chiropractic & Manual Therapies (2016) 24:2

  • Similar processes have been observed in a comprehensive group of health professionals [2, 4, 17], and more recently in the chiropractic profession [18, 19]

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Summary

Introduction

Job stress and emotional exhaustion have been shown to have a negative impact on the helping professional. The objective of this study is to understand the main sources of occupational stress and emotional exhaustion among doctors of chiropractic. Occupational stress and emotional exhaustion (EE) are extensive problems for health-care workers [1,2,3,4]. McManus et al [16] suggest that EE and occupational stress may have reciprocal causation – that is, high levels of Williams Chiropractic & Manual Therapies (2016) 24:2. A recent study [18] exploring burnout in the chiropractic profession suggests that overall values of burnout are relatively low (~2 %), higher levels of EE (~21 %) remain workplace issues for this professional group

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