| Literature DB >> 35071671 |
Christos Sikaras1,2, Ioannis Ilias3, Athanasios Tselebis4, Argyro Pachi4, Sofia Zyga2, Maria Tsironi2, Andrea Paola Rojas Gil2, Aspasia Panagiotou2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) is an unprecedented global health crisis with emotional and physical impact on health care workers.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; burnout; fatigue; nurses
Year: 2021 PMID: 35071671 PMCID: PMC8755962 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2022008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
General characteristics of nursing staff.
| Sex | Age | Work experience (in years) | |
| Nursing staff caring for patients with COVID-19 | |||
| Male | Mean | 43.28 | 17.98 |
| SD | 10.83 | 11.17 | |
| Female | Mean | 41.14 | 16.66 |
| SD | 9.74 | 10.60 | |
| Total | Mean | 41.43 | 16.84 |
| SD | 9.91 | 10.67 | |
| Nursing staff caring for patients with non-COVID-19 | |||
| Male | Mean | 45.55 | 20.01 |
| SD | 8.21 | 9.24 | |
| Female | Mean | 44.16 | 19.48 |
| SD | 10.13 | 11.15 | |
| Total | Mean | 44.40 | 19.57 |
| SD | 9.83 | 10.83 | |
General characteristics of nursing staff and FAS/CBI scores with regards to gender.
| Participants | Descriptive statistics | Age | Work experience (in years) | Fatigue assessment scale | Copenhagen burnout inventory | |||
| Total | Personal burnout | Work-related burnout | Patient-related burnout | |||||
| Men | Mean | 44.50 | 19.07 | 22.58** | 39.19** | 39.43** | 43.18** | 34.30* |
| SD | 9.53 | 10.18 | 6.94 | 18.78 | 19.55 | 22.02 | 22.13 | |
| Women | Mean | 42.54 | 17.97 | 26.15** | 48.36** | 51.43** | 53.68** | 39.07* |
| SD | 10.03 | 10.93 | 7.31 | 18.42 | 19.21 | 21.97 | 22.93 | |
| Total | Mean | 42.85 | 18.14 | 25.61 | 46.95 | 49.58 | 52.06 | 38.33 |
| SD | 9.97 | 10.83 | 7.37 | 18.75 | 19.73 | 22.28 | 22.86 | |
Note: *p < 0.05 or **p < 0.01.
General characteristics of nursing staff and FAS/CBI scores with regards to workplace.
| Participants | Descriptive statistics | Age | Work experience (in Years) | Fatigue assessment scale | Copenhagen burnout inventory | |||
| Total | Personal burnout | Work-related burnout | Patient-related burnout | |||||
| Staff in a COVID-19 department N = 367 | Mean | 41.43 | 16.82 | 26.64** | 49.46** | 51.80** | 55.56** | 40.01* |
| SD | 9.91 | 10.67 | 7.45 | 18.53 | 19.03 | 21.29 | 23.02 | |
| Staff in a non-COVID-19 department N = 334 | Mean | 44.40 | 19.57 | 24.47** | 44.18** | 47.14** | 48.22** | 36.49* |
| SD | 9.83 | 10.83 | 7.12 | 18.64 | 20.21 | 22.75 | 22.57 | |
Note: *p < 0.05 or **p < 0.01.
General characteristics of nursing staff and FAS/CBI scores with regards to COVID-19 status.
| Participants | Descriptive statistics | Age | Work experience (in years) | Fatigue assessment scale | Copenhagen burnout inventory |
| COVID-19 (–) staff | Mean | 42.73 | 17.98 | 25.58 | 46.46 |
| SD | 10.07 | 10.90 | 7.41 | 18.61 | |
| Hospitalized COVID-19 (+) staff | Mean | 48.00 | 23.93 | 27.14 | 61.56 |
| SD | 5.32 | 6.08 | 7.16 | 14.99 | |
| Staff positive for COVID-19 | Mean | 42.93 | 18.71 | 25.55 | 47.55 |
| SD | 9.34 | 10.52 | 6.86 | 20.53 |
Correlations among age, work experience (in years), FAS, CBI.
| N = 701 Variables | Age | Work experience (in years) | Fatigue assessment scale | Copenhagen personal burnout | Copenhagen work-related burnout |
| Work experience (in years) | 0.92** | ||||
| Fatigue assessment scale | −0.06 | −0.03 | |||
| Copenhagen burnout inventory (Total) | 0.03 | 0.072 | 0.70** | ||
| Copenhagen personal burnout | −0.04 | −0.01 | 0.69** | ||
| Copenhagen work-related burnout | −0.01 | 0.03 | 0.67** | 0.74** | |
| Copenhagen patient-related burnout | 0.12** | 0.17** | 0.47** | 0.50** | 0.62** |
Note: *p < 0.05 or **p < 0.01.
Stepwise multiple regression (only statistically significant variables are included).
| Dependent variable: Fatigue assessment scale | R square | R square change | Beta | t | p |
| Copenhagen personal burnout | 0.470 | 0.470 | 0.417 | 10.85 | 0.01* |
| Copenhagen work-related burnout | 0.531 | 0.061 | 0.364 | 9.486 | 0.01* |
Note: Beta = Standardized Regression Coefficient; Correlations are statistically significant at the *p < 0.01 level.
Figure 1.Mediation analysis diagram for workplace (COVID-19/non-COVID-19), gender (men vs women), CBI tot and FAS; regression coefficients with standard errors in parentheses.