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- Title
Burnout syndrome and perceptions about safety climate among intensive care professionals .
- Authors
Arcanjo de Sousa, Ana Kele; Braga Ribeiro, Silvania; Freire de Vasconcelos, Patrícia; Meneses Oliveira, Roberta; da Silva, Maria Eliane; Carvalho de Sousa Freire, Vanessa Emille; dos Santos Sousa, Vitória Talya
- Abstract
Objective: to analyze the relationship between Burnout Syndrome and perceptions about safety climate among intensive care professionals. Methods: a cross-sectional study with 51 health professionals from a public hospital in northeastern Brazil. The following instruments were applied: the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire, and a Sociodemographic questionnaire. Descriptive, analytical (Spearman's test) and inferential statistics were adopted. Results: there was a high level of emotional exhaustion (64.7%) and low levels of depersonalization (74.5%) and personal accomplishment (56.8%) in the Burnout assessment. The safety climate was considered satisfactory, with the Safe Behaviors domain having the highest average. There was a moderate correlation between the Stress recognition and Depersonalization subscales. Conclusion: there was a correlation between safety climate and Burnout in the Stress recognition and Depersonalization dimensions, with the latter being considered a consequence of stressful factors which distance professionals from patients.
- Subjects
BRAZIL; ATTITUDE (Psychology); PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout; CORPORATE culture; INTENSIVE care units; JOB satisfaction; MEDICAL personnel; PATIENT safety; SENSORY perception; PUBLIC hospitals; WORK environment; DATA analysis software; DESCRIPTIVE statistics
- Publication
Rev Rene, 2020, Vol 21, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1517-3852
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.15253/2175-6783.20202143868