A systematic review including meta-analysis of work environment and burnout symptoms
Stockholm University · Karolinska Institutet · +6 more institutions
Abstract
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.
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.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 86.65
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Cynicism
- Emotional exhaustion
- Burnout
- Medicine
- Job control
- Biostatistics
- Job satisfaction
- Inclusion (mineral)