Abstract

To discriminate low/medium/high burnout in nurses by work and patient-related indicators and explore what factors characterize these categories best. Cross-sectional, online survey with a representative sample of nurses. Measures assessed burnout, intragroup conflict, job insecurity, overt aggression and impact of patient aggression on nurses. Top nurse managers experienced more burnout than middle managers or staff, middle managers also reported greater burnout than staff. Those who had never suffered aggression experienced greater burnout but less intragroup conflict and job insecurity. Staff differed on job insecurity from top and midlevel managers. The first discriminant function differentiated high burnout from medium and low; this function was characterized by exhaustion, aggression and intragroup conflict. The second function differentiated medium burnout from others; job insecurity, years worked, over aggression and overtime dominated this function. Burnout affects managers and staff differently; top managers may be more susceptible to burnout than reported before. Low, medium and high burnout groups require tailored interventions because of their different characteristics. In the future, burnout assessment should focus on both organisational and care related factors. Determining levels of burnout will guide managers to improve the right aspects of practice and work environment.

Highlights

  • Burnout in nurses seems a fairly well‐studied phenomenon, a PubMed search with mesh words “nurse” and “burnout” returns a total of 4,197 publications

  • Do staff, middle and top nurse managers differ on main measures?

  • When we looked at the impact of aggression those who were unexposed to patient aggression showed greater burnout but less intragroup conflict and job insecurity

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Patient aggression suffered by nursing staff was viewed as a form of external pressure Such aggression was identified as a significant predictor of burnout (Gascon et al, 2013). Since burnout is not uni‐ versal and there are different stages of burnout, this research in‐ vestigated the discriminatory power of work‐related variables such as appraised job conflict and insecurity as well as patient aggres‐ sion on low, medium and high burnout cases to understand factors underlying each group and to support nurse managers identifying individualized interventions for these separate clusters. Are there differences on main psychometric measures (burnout, impact of and overt patient aggression, intragroup conflict and job insecurity) by level of education, overtime and perceived aggression?. Do staff, middle and top nurse managers differ on main measures (burnout, impact of and overt patient aggression, intragroup con‐ flict and job insecurity)?

| METHODS
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