Abstract

Burnout in healthcare providers has impacts at the level of the individual provider, patient, and organization. While there is a substantial body of literature on burnout in healthcare providers, burnout in pediatric nurses has received less attention. This subpopulation may be unique from adult care nurses because of the specialized nature of providing care to children who are typically seen as a vulnerable population, the high potential for empathetic engagement, and the inherent complexities in the relationships with families. Thus, the aim of this scoping review was to investigate, among pediatric nurses, (i) the prevalence and/or degree of burnout, (ii) the factors related to burnout, (iii) the outcomes of burnout, and (iv) the interventions that have been applied to prevent and/or mitigate burnout. This scoping review was performed according to the PRISMA Guidelines Scoping Review Extension. CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, ASSIA, and The Cochrane Library were searched on 3 November 2018 to identify relevant quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-method studies on pediatric nurse burnout. Our search identified 78 studies for inclusion in the analysis. Across the included studies, burnout was prevalent in pediatric nurses. A number of factors were identified as impacting burnout including nurse demographics, work environment, and work attitudes. Similarly, a number of outcomes of burnout were identified including nurse retention, nurse well-being, patient safety, and patient-family satisfaction. Unfortunately, there was little evidence of effective interventions to address pediatric nurse burnout. Given the prevalence and impact of burnout on a variety of important outcomes, it is imperative that nursing schools, nursing management, healthcare organizations, and nursing professional associations work to develop and test the interventions to address key attitudinal and environmental factors that are most relevant to pediatric nurses.

Highlights

  • Buckley et al Human Resources for Health. The purpose of this scoping review is to explore what is known about pediatric nurse burnout to guide future research on this highly specialized population and, improve both pediatric nurse and patient wellbeing

  • The results in this review are reported for pediatric nurse samples and subsamples only

  • The 25th percentile ranking for the Burnout subscale of the Professional Quality of Life (ProQOL) measure was 43.45, the 50th percentile ranking was 49.22, and the 75th percentile was 56.92

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Summary

Introduction

Burnout has been a widely studied topic of interest over the last 40 years, with significant resources devoted toward investigating its causes, impacts, and strategies for mitigation [1]. The study of burnout in healthcare professionals is important as it has impacts at the level of the individual provider [3–5], the patient [6–9], and the organization [5, 10–12]. As nurses make up the largest group of healthcare professionals, there have been a number of Buckley et al Human Resources for Health. The purpose of this scoping review is to explore what is known about pediatric nurse burnout to guide future research on this highly specialized population and, improve both pediatric nurse and patient wellbeing. The aim of this scoping review was to investigate, among pediatric nurses, (i) the prevalence and/or degree of burnout, (ii) the factors related to burnout, (iii) the outcomes of burnout, and (iv) the interventions that have been applied to prevent and/or mitigate burnout

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