A systematic review including meta-analysis of work environment and burnout symptoms.

Gunnar Aronsson, Töres Theorell, Tom Grape, Anne Hammarström, Christer Hogstedt, Ina Marteinsdottir, Ingmar Skoog, Lil Träskman-Bendz, Charlotte Hall
Author Information
  1. Gunnar Aronsson: Department of Psychology, University of Stockholm, S-10691, Stockholm, Sweden. Gunnar.Aronsson@psychology.su.se. ORCID
  2. Töres Theorell: Stress Research Institute, University of Stockholm, Stockholm, Sweden.
  3. Tom Grape: Health Care Centre, Norrtälje, Sweden.
  4. Anne Hammarström: Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, University of Umeå, Umeå, Sweden.
  5. Christer Hogstedt: Division of Occupational Medicine, Institute for Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Solna, Sweden.
  6. Ina Marteinsdottir: Division of Psychiatry, University of Linköping, Linköping, Sweden.
  7. Ingmar Skoog: Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
  8. Lil Träskman-Bendz: Division of Psychiatry, University of Lund, Lund, Sweden.
  9. Charlotte Hall: Swedish Council of Health Technology Assessment, Stockholm, Sweden.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Practitioners and decision makers in the medical and insurance systems need knowledge on the relationship between work exposures and burnout. Many burnout studies - original as well as reviews - restricted their analyses to emotional exhaustion or did not report results on Cynicism, personal accomplishment or global burnout. To meet this need we carried out this review and meta-analyses with the aim to provide systematically graded evidence for associations between working conditions and near-future development of burnout symptoms.
METHODS: A wide range of work exposure factors was screened. Inclusion criteria were: 1) Study performed in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand 1990-2013. 2) Prospective or comparable case control design. 3) Assessments of exposure (work) and outcome at baseline and at least once again during follow up 1-5 years later. Twenty-five articles met the predefined relevance and quality criteria. The GRADE-system with its 4-grade evidence scale was used.
RESULTS: Most of the 25 studies focused emotional exhaustion, fewer Cynicism and still fewer personal accomplishment. Moderately strong evidence (grade 3) was concluded for the association between job control and reduced emotional exhaustion and between low workplace support and increased emotional exhaustion. Limited evidence (grade 2) was found for the associations between workplace justice, demands, high work load, low reward, low supervisor support, low co-worker support, job insecurity and change in emotional exhaustion. Cynicism was associated with most of these work factors. Reduced personal accomplishment was only associated with low reward. There were few prospective studies with sufficient quality on adverse chemical, biological and physical factors and burnout.
CONCLUSION: While high levels of job support and workplace justice were protective for emotional exhaustion, high demands, low job control, high work load, low reward and job insecurity increased the risk for developing exhaustion. Our approach with a wide range of work exposure factors analysed in relation to the separate dimensions of burnout expanded the knowledge of associations, evidence as well as research needs. The potential of organizational interventions is illustrated by the findings that burnout symptoms are strongly influenced by structural factors such as job demands, support and the possibility to exert control.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Achievement
Adult
Australia
Burnout, Professional
Case-Control Studies
Europe
Female
Humans
Male
Mental Fatigue
New Zealand
North America
Occupational Exposure
Organizational Culture
Prospective Studies
Reward
Social Justice
Surveys and Questionnaires
Workload
Workplace

Word Cloud

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