Title of article :
Sources of stress and burnout in acute psychiatric care:
inpatient vs. community staff
Author/Authors :
Knut W. S?rgaard، نويسنده , , Peter Ryan، نويسنده , , Robert Hill، نويسنده , , Ian Dawson and the OSCAR group، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Background Professionals who work
alone or in small teams often provide services for
people with serious mental health problems in community
settings. Stress is common in community
teams and this may cause burnout and threaten the
quality and stability of the services. This study compares
levels of burnout and sources of stress among
community and acute ward staff in six European
centres. Methods A total of 6 acute ward (N = 204)
and community staff (N = 209) in 5 different European
countries filled out the Maslach Burnout
Inventory (MBI), the Mental Health Professional
Scale (MHPSS) the Agervold Questionnaire for psychosocial
work environment (QPWES) in addition
to a comprehensive demographic questionnaire.
Results In the univariate analyses, except for Emotional
Exhaustion (MBI), there were no differences in
burnout between the two groups of staff. Community
teams reported more organisational problems, higher
work demands, less contact with colleagues, but also
better social relations and more control over their
work. The ward staff was more satisfied with the organisational
structure and access to colleagues, but
complained about lack of control over operating
conditions at work. The multivariate analyses identified
four groups of staff: (1) a Control-dissatisfied and
Contact satisfied group (N = 184) with 2/3 coming
from the wards. (2) A Contact-satisfied and Workdemand
dissatisfied group (N = 147) with 3=4 from
the community staff. (3) A Control- and Contact
dissatisfied group (N = 47) with a majority from
community teams, and (4) a Contact- and Work demand
satisfied group (N = 37) with a majority from
the wards. Conclusion Burnout as measured was not a
serious problem among community and ward staff
members, and did not differentiate between the two
groups. Acute ward working implied lack of control
but much contact with colleagues, whereas community
work entailed more control but demanding work
in terms of difficult task and hard-to-find-solutions.
Keywords :
stress – burnout – community care –acute wards
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)