Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit

Objective: To identify if nurses working in cardiac and general Intensive Care Units are subject to burnout, correlating it with demographic and occupational information. Methods: This is a descriptive exploratory, cross-sectional, prospective and correlational study utilizing  quantitative resource...

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Main Authors: Faustino Eduardo dos Santos, Joubert Araujo Alves, Andrea Bezerra Rodrigues
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert Einstein 2009-03-01
Series:Einstein (São Paulo)
Subjects:
Online Access:http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/979-einsteinv7n1p58_63_eng.pdf
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spelling doaj-5e37b8c4b6a340c7b40a6ae422307f102020-11-25T00:50:02ZengInstituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert EinsteinEinstein (São Paulo)1679-45082009-03-01715863Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care UnitFaustino Eduardo dos SantosJoubert Araujo AlvesAndrea Bezerra RodriguesObjective: To identify if nurses working in cardiac and general Intensive Care Units are subject to burnout, correlating it with demographic and occupational information. Methods: This is a descriptive exploratory, cross-sectional, prospective and correlational study utilizing  quantitative resources. The sample was composed of 34 nurses who answered the Maslach and Jackson inventory (MBI-HSS), which consists of 22 questions plus a questionnaire on demographic and occupational data. The study was carried out at a large private hospital in the city of São Paulo, Brazil. Rresults: Of 34 nurses, nine had high emotional exhaustion, nine high depersonalization, ten had a high score of reduced professional accomplishment (decreased personal fulfillment at work). Most nurses presented alterations in more than one dimension regarding burnout. Cconclusions: The majority of nurses presented burnout and there was a positive correlation between burnout and the variables: sex, advanced professional degrees, time working in nursing, workload and working at more than one hospital.http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/979-einsteinv7n1p58_63_eng.pdfBurnoutprofessionalNursingteamIntensive care unitsStress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Faustino Eduardo dos Santos
Joubert Araujo Alves
Andrea Bezerra Rodrigues
spellingShingle Faustino Eduardo dos Santos
Joubert Araujo Alves
Andrea Bezerra Rodrigues
Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
Einstein (São Paulo)
Burnout
professional
Nursing
team
Intensive care units
Stress
author_facet Faustino Eduardo dos Santos
Joubert Araujo Alves
Andrea Bezerra Rodrigues
author_sort Faustino Eduardo dos Santos
title Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
title_short Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
title_full Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
title_fullStr Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
title_full_unstemmed Burnout syndrome in nurses in an Intensive Care Unit
title_sort burnout syndrome in nurses in an intensive care unit
publisher Instituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert Einstein
series Einstein (São Paulo)
issn 1679-4508
publishDate 2009-03-01
description Objective: To identify if nurses working in cardiac and general Intensive Care Units are subject to burnout, correlating it with demographic and occupational information. Methods: This is a descriptive exploratory, cross-sectional, prospective and correlational study utilizing  quantitative resources. The sample was composed of 34 nurses who answered the Maslach and Jackson inventory (MBI-HSS), which consists of 22 questions plus a questionnaire on demographic and occupational data. The study was carried out at a large private hospital in the city of São Paulo, Brazil. Rresults: Of 34 nurses, nine had high emotional exhaustion, nine high depersonalization, ten had a high score of reduced professional accomplishment (decreased personal fulfillment at work). Most nurses presented alterations in more than one dimension regarding burnout. Cconclusions: The majority of nurses presented burnout and there was a positive correlation between burnout and the variables: sex, advanced professional degrees, time working in nursing, workload and working at more than one hospital.
topic Burnout
professional
Nursing
team
Intensive care units
Stress
url http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/979-einsteinv7n1p58_63_eng.pdf
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