Abstract

BackgroundExhaustion disorder (ED) is a common cause of sick leave in Sweden, and patients often have long-lasting symptoms and reduced work capacity. The aim of this study was to explore whether patients with ED had made any changes in their work situation from the period of treatment and up to 7 years later.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study, patients diagnosed with ED at a specialist outpatient clinic were followed up after 7 years (n = 217). They received questionnaires at baseline covering sex, age, marital status, level of education, and symptoms of burnout, depression, and anxiety measured with the Shirom-Melamed Burnout Questionnaire and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. After 7 years, they were sent a follow-up questionnaire asking about their work situation and work-related stressors both before they fell sick and at the 7-year follow-up. There were three questions on work situation (change of workplace, change of work tasks, and change of working hours), and 155 patients responded to all three.ResultsAfter 7 years, the majority of the patients (63%; n = 98/155) reported that they had made some kind of change at work. Women were more likely than men to report decreased working hours (p = 0.001), and work-related stressors such as conflicts at work, reorganization, deficient leadership, and general discontent with the work situation were significantly more common at baseline in the group who had made changes at work. Patients who made no changes at work experienced more work-related stress due to quantitative demands in the 7-year follow-up.ConclusionThe majority of the patients with ED made some kind of change in their work situation, and gender differences were found for changes of work tasks and working hours. Work-related stressors might be decisive for making changes at work.

Highlights

  • Mental disorders are the most common diagnoses relating to sick leave in Sweden

  • Most of them (63%; n = 98/ 155) reported that they had made some kind of change at work with regard to at least one of these three aspects, and so only 37% (n = 57/155) reported being in the same work situation regarding workplace, work tasks, and working hours

  • Of those who reported that they had made some kind of change at work, 43% (n = 67/155) had made changes in more than one of the three aspects

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Summary

Introduction

Mental disorders are the most common diagnoses relating to sick leave in Sweden. In 2019, 53% of women and 42% of men on sick leave had a psychiatric diagnosis. Within this group, the most common type of diagnosis was stress-related mental disorders: acute stress reaction, reaction to severe stress, and exhaustion disorder (ED) [1]. Sick leave among patients seeking care for symptoms of exhaustion due to prolonged exposure to psychosocial and work-related stress has been shown to be long-lasting [1, 3,4,5]. Exhaustion disorder (ED) is a common cause of sick leave in Sweden, and patients often have longlasting symptoms and reduced work capacity. The aim of this study was to explore whether patients with ED had made any changes in their work situation from the period of treatment and up to 7 years later

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