Causes and Symptoms of Burnout
The World Health Organization recognizes three primary dimensions of burnout:
- feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion
- increased mental distance from one’s job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one’s job
- reduced professional efficacy
These dimensions may manifest themselves in a variety of symptoms, such as exhaustion, apathy, resentment, headaches, and difficulty sleeping. All of these symptoms create dangerous outcomes for nurses and their patients. Burnout can lead to lower patient satisfaction, increased likelihood of hospital-acquired infections, and increased mortality rates.
In 2021, Nursing CE Central conducted a survey to understand better the impact burnout had on nurses.
These are the most common causes of burnout reported:
- Low staffing/High Workload
- Emotional/Physical Exhaustion
- Workplace Culture/Benefits
These causes are never individual nurses’ fault but instead come from institutional challenges. 38% of nurses said they had not brought their concerns about burnout to the administration. These nurses represent a huge gap in communication that may help incentive administration to negotiate solutions for the common causes of burnout.
Nearly 20% of nurses surveyed were actively looking into leaving the nursing profession due to burnout, while another 30% were looking to move to a less stressful nursing position. These unsustainable numbers showcase a dire need to alleviate burnout for nurses.
Moments of high stress are to be expected in a career like nursing, where nurses know they are directly impacting the lives of their community every day. However, high stress without any solutions or change to mitigate the negative impact on nurses is not sustainable.
Nurses have been protesting for safer, more sustainable working conditions at the organizational level through minimum nurse-to-patient staffing ratios and mandated protections for nurses’ personal time. These negotiations are vital for the continued well-being of nurses as a whole, but what can individual nurses do to help alleviate the symptoms of burnout?
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