Viewing entries tagged
burnout

Comment

Relationship between job burnout and somatic diseases

relation between high blood pressure and job burnout

relation between high blood pressure and job burnout

Roland von Känel, Mary Princip, Sarah A. Holzgang, Walther J. Fuchs, Marc van Nuffel, Aju P. Pazhenkottil & Tobias R. Spiller, »Relationship between job burnout and somatic diseases: a network analysis«, in: Scientific Reports, 2020, 10, 18438, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-75611-7

Abstract

Job burnout, characterized by feelings of exhaustion, cynicism and reduced personal efficacy, has been defined as a risk state for the development of diseases, but its association with somatic diseases is underexplored. Study participants were 5671 respondents (mean age 44.1 years, range 18–70; 38.6% men) to an online survey of job burnout, using a mobile health web application. Respondents provided data on sociodemographic characteristics, symptoms of burnout, measured with the Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey, depressive symptoms, measured with the Profile of Mood States, and 11 categories of somatic diseases. Adjusting for age, sex, educational level, depressive symptoms, and all disease categories included, network analysis showed a significant association of high exhaustion with “high blood pressure” and a category of “other chronic somatic diseases”. Low personal efficacy showed a significant association with “chronic lung diseases”. In network analysis, clinically relevant depressive symptoms were also significantly associated with “high blood pressure”, “other chronic somatic diseases” and “skin diseases”. Logistic regression analysis confirmed these associations. Burnout dimensions were significantly associated with an increased risk for somatic diseases, independently of sociodemographic factors and clinically relevant depressive symptoms. This relationship seems particularly evident for the exhaustion dimension of job burnout.


Roland von Känel, Mary Princip, Sarah A. Holzgang, Walther J. Fuchs, Marc van Nuffel, Aju P. Pazhenkottil & Tobias R. Spiller, »Relationship between job burnout and somatic diseases: a network analysis«, in: Scientific Reports, 2020, 10, 18438, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-75611-7

Zusammenfassung

Nach der gängigen Lehrmeinung ist Burnout keine Krankheit, aber sehr wohl eine Risikozustand dafür, dass betroffene Arbeitnehmende eine psychische oder körperliche Krankheit entwickeln können. In unserer Studie mit 5671 Teilnehmenden fanden wir einen Zusammenhang zwischen Burnout und einem erhöhten Blutdruck, Lungenkrankheiten und weiteren somatischen Krankheiten. Diese Zusammenhänge waren unabhängig vom Alter, Geschlecht, Bildungsstand und depressiver Symptome der Teilnehmenden.

Comment

Comment

Empirical evidence for a relationship between narcissistic personality traits and job burnout

Kathleen Schwarzkopfa,∗, Doris Strausb, Hildburg Porschkeb, Hansjörg Znojc, Nathalie Conradd, Arno Schmidt-Trucksässe, Roland von Känela,f

a Department of Neurology, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital and University of Bern, Switzerland b Clinica Holistica Engiadina SA, Susch, Graubu ̈nden, Switzerland
c Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Bern, Switzerland
d Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften, Switzerland

e Division Sports and Exercise Medicine, Institute of Exercise and Health Sciences, University of Basel, Switzerland f Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, Clinic Barmelweid, Barmelweid, Switzerland 

abstract

Purpose: The relationship between burnout and depression has been a major focus of burnout research, but personality factors might be equally important. Largely based on theoretical grounds, narcissism has repeatedly been proposed to contribute to burnout.
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine empirically the relationship between burnout and narcissism.

Methods: We investigated 723 consecutive in-patients, aged between 22 and 80 years (51.2% female), at a hospital specialized in the treatment of job stress-related disorders. Patients completed the 22-item Maslach Burnout Inventory and the 20-item Narcissism Inventory, the Beck Depression Inventory, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and the Perceived Stress Scale.

Results: After controlling for sociodemographic factors, depressive symptoms, sleep quality, and perceived stress, narcissism explained 3.5% of the total burnout score (p < .001); regarding burnout dimensions, narcissism explained 7.3% of emotional exhaustion (p<.001) and 3.6% of depersonalization (p<.001), but was unrelated to lack of achievements (p = .45). Depressive symptoms explained 3.6% of the total burnout score, 2.6% of emotional exhaustion, 2.0% of depersonalization, and 1.4% of lack of achievements (all p-values ≤.005).

Conclusions: Personality factors, especially narcissism, may be equally important as depressive symptoms, and thus should regularly be considered in burnout research and therapy. 

Comment