| Literature DB >> 24628839 |
Andreas Seidler1, Marleen Thinschmidt, Stefanie Deckert, Francisca Then, Janice Hegewald, Karen Nieuwenhuijsen, Steffi G Riedel-Heller.
Abstract
AIMS: To analyze the association between psychosocial working conditions and burnout and its core component emotional exhaustion, a systematic literature review was undertaken including cohort studies, case-control studies, and randomized controlled trials.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24628839 PMCID: PMC4233644 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6673-9-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Med Toxicol ISSN: 1745-6673 Impact factor: 2.646
Eligibility criteria
| working population, age: 17+ (no age limit because of manifestation of effect in old age) | age <17 years, unemployed subjects | |
| chemical (e.g. solvents, lead, manganese) or physical factors (e.g. noise, electromagnetic fields), physical requirements of the job, not-work-environment-related stressors (e.g. family caregiving), vocational training or study | ||
| stress, mental load, work load, effort, reward, job strain, job demand, job control, shift work, time pressure, job insecurity, institutional changes like down-sizing or merger, social support/ mobbing, bullying, leadership style, climate, work-related justice | ||
| burnout and emotional exhaustion | physical disorders/ impairments, chronic fatigue syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychological distress, psychiatric distress, psycho-social well-being, mental health or psychiatric morbidity in general | |
| valid self-rating scales, clinical diagnosis with/ without structured interview, secondary data | unvalidated instruments (e.g. single items) | |
| cohort, case–control, RCT | all others | |
| articles in journals and with available abstract | books, book chapters, book reviews, comments, corrections, editorials, introductions, forewords, letters, replies, dissertations |
Methodologically adequate studies on the association between psychosocial workload and emotional exhaustion/burnout
| Ahola & Hakanen 2007 [ | Finland | Follow-up study | Finnish dentists (members of Finnish Dental Association) | 2,555 Finnish dentists (71% response of all Finnish dentists) | 2003 | 2006 (3 years), loss to follow-up 22% | Job strain (Job Content Questionnaire - JCQ) | Burnout (Maslach Burnout Inventory - MBI) | Subjects free of burnout at baseline, adjusted for depression at baseline: |
| job strain: OR=22.3 (95% CI 5.1-98.1) | |||||||||
| Job strain: OR=4.0 (95% CI 2.0-8.0) | |||||||||
| Subjects free of burnout but with depressive symptoms at baseline: | |||||||||
| Job strain: OR=2.2 (95% CI: 1.4-3.4) | |||||||||
| Subjects free of depression (measured by Beck Depression Inventory - BDI) at baseline, adjusted for baseline burnout: | |||||||||
| Job strain: OR=1.8 (95% CI: 1.04-3.1) | |||||||||
| Janssen and Nijhuis 2004 [ | Netherlands | Follow-up study | 45 companies | 5,256 employees (response rate 45%, mean age 42.3±8.5 years) | 1998 | 1 year, loss to follow-up 20% | (1) Psychological demands (JCQ, Dutch version) | Burnout-subscale emotional exhaustion of MBI-GS (General Survey) | Reduced emotional exhaustion: |
| (1) Decreased job demands: β=-0.16, p<0.001 | |||||||||
| (2) Decision latitude (JCQ, Dutch version) | |||||||||
| (2) Increased decision latitude: β=0.07, p<0.001 | |||||||||
| (3) Social support (JCQ, Dutch version) | |||||||||
| (3) Increased social support: β=-0.07, p<0.001 | |||||||||
| Langballe et al. 2011 [ | Norway | Follow-up study | physicians | n=291 female physicians (response rate 74%, mean age 41.8±9.9 years), n=232 male physicians (response rate 64%, mean age 48.1±10.9 years) | 2005 | 2 years, loss to follow-up 21% (women) and 26% (men) | (1) Perceived workload (3-item scale, based on the Job Stress Questionnaire - JSQ) | Burnout-subscale exhaustion of Oldenburg Burnout Inventory (OLBI, Norwegian version) | |
| (1) High workload (follow up): β=0.17, p<0.01 | |||||||||
| (2) autonomy (4-item scale, based on the Job Stress Questionnaire - JSQ) | (2) High autonomy (follow up): β=0.07, n. s. | ||||||||
| (3) no. of hours worked per week | (3) Working hours (baseline): β=0.01, n. s. | ||||||||
| (1) High workload (follow up): β=0.31, p<0.01 | |||||||||
| (2) High autonomy (follow up): β=0.22, p<0.001 | |||||||||
| (3) Working hours (baseline): β=0.03, n. s. | |||||||||
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| Lorente Prieto et al. 2008 [ | Spain | Follow-up study | 23 secondary schools | N=274 teachers (response rate 81%, mean age 40±7.0 years, 43% men) | n.r. | 8 months, loss to follow-up 43% | (1) quantitative overload (3-item scale, instrument n. r.) | burnout-subscale emotional exhaustion of MBI-GS | (1) Quantitative overload (baseline): β=0.12, p<0.05 |
| (2) mental demands (6-item scale, instrument n. r.) | Results for exposure no. (2)-(7) n. r., n. s. | ||||||||
| (3) emotional demands (7-item scale, instrument n. r.) | |||||||||
| Women feel more exhaustion (β=0.11, p<0.05) at follow-up than men | |||||||||
| (4) role ambiguity (6-item scale, instrument n. r.) | |||||||||
| (5) role conflict (8-item scale, instrument n.r.) | |||||||||
| (6) autonomy (5-item scale, instrument n. r.) | |||||||||
| (7) social climate (3-item climate scale of the FOCUS questionnaire [ | |||||||||
| Taris et al. 2010 [ | Nether-lands | Follow-up study | Dutch police officers | 828 police officers, mean age 42.1±7.8 years, 85% men, response rate for baseline examination 53% | n.r. | 1 year, loss to follow-up 57% | (1) job demands (4-items of the JCQ) | burnout-subscale emotional exhaustion of MBI-GS (Dutch version) | (1) High demands: β=0.08, p<0.01 |
| (2) Job control: n. s. | |||||||||
| (2) job control (9-item scale: 1 item from JCQ, 3 items from Dutch Stress Questionnaire, 5 items from the NOVA-WEBA questionnaire [ | |||||||||
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| Van Vegchel et al. 2004 [ | Sweden | Follow-up study | Human services | 2,255 human service employees, mean age 47.0±6.5 years, 41% men, response rate 76% | 1997 | 1 year, loss to follow-up 29% | (1) Quantitative demands (4-item scale based on the JCQ) | Burnout-subscale emotional exhaustion of MBI (Swedish version) | Model 1: |
| (1) High quantitative demands: β=0.12, p<0.01 | |||||||||
| (2) Emotional demands (8-item scale) | (3) Low job control: β=-0.10, p<0.05 | ||||||||
| (4) Low social support: β=-0.07, p<0.05 | |||||||||
| (3) Job control (8-item scale, instrument n. r.) | |||||||||
| Model 2: | |||||||||
| (4) Social support (7-item scale, instrument n. r.) | (2) High emotional demands: β=0.09, p<0.001 | ||||||||
| (3) Low job control: β=-0.10, p<0.05 | |||||||||
| (4) Low social support: β=-0.08, p<0.05 | |||||||||
Abbreviations: n. s. not significant, n. r. not reported, JCQ Job Content Questionnaire; MBI Maslach Burnout Inventory, MBI-GS Maslach Burnout Inventory – General Survey.
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection procedure for systematic review of burnout and mental disorders and psychosocial working conditions (according to the PRISMA statement, Moher et al. [42]). *Note: One study reported about both burnout/emotional exhaustion and depression (duplication), the subject of this review is marked grey.