Abstract

BackgroundBurnout has long been understood as work-related physical, emotional, and cognitive exhaustion. However, burnout symptoms can also be found among younger people, including school-aged adolescents. While the Shirom-Melamed Burnout Measure (SMBM) is a widely applied instrument, its psychometric properties have not yet been investigated in adolescent populations. We therefore examined the psychometric properties of the SMBM in three independent samples of adolescents.MethodsIn total, 249 high school students, 144 vocational students, and 257 adolescent elite athletes completed the SMBM, along with questionnaires related to perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and life satisfaction. Descriptive statistics, gender differences, and internal consistency, convergent/discriminant validity, and factorial validity (including measurement invariance across genders) were examined in each sample.ResultsThe SMBM had adequate internal consistency. Confirmatory factor analyses showed that both a first- and second-order model achieve good model fit. Moreover, evidence for sufficient convergent and discriminant validity was found. Finally, in two of the three samples, female adolescents reported higher SMBM scores.ConclusionsThe SMBM has been widely used in international burnout research. However, this is the first study providing empirical evidence that the SMBM has acceptable psychometric properties and satisfactory convergent/discriminant and factorial validity among young people. The SMBM is a concise and economic tool to assess self-rated symptoms of burnout, and presents a valuable alternative to existing school burnout inventories. In particular, the SMBM can facilitate the investigation of the transition of young people from school to working life.

Highlights

  • Burnout has long been understood as work-related physical, emotional, and cognitive exhaustion

  • No significant gender differences were observed for the Shirom-Melamed Burnout Measure (SMBM) overall index and the emotional exhaustion subscale, and boys and girls were represented among participants with clinically relevant burnout levels

  • Our study reveals that this instrument has adequate psychometric properties and satisfactory convergent and factorial validity among adolescents

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Summary

Introduction

Burnout has long been understood as work-related physical, emotional, and cognitive exhaustion. Burnout symptoms can be found among younger people, including school-aged adolescents. While the Shirom-Melamed Burnout Measure (SMBM) is a widely applied instrument, its psychometric properties have not yet been investigated in adolescent populations. Burnout was initially defined as a work-related syndrome that gradually develops when people are exposed to chronic emotional and interpersonal stress at work [2]. Drawing on Hobfoll’s Conservation of Resources (COR) theory, Melamed et al [7] argued that the central characteristics of the burnout construct are emotional exhaustion, physical fatigue, and cognitive weariness. Significant relationships were observed between burnout and depression, with varying degrees of overlap [15, 22,23,24]

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