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- Title
Organizational Conditions That Influence Work Engagement and Burnout: A Qualitative Study of Mental Health Workers.
- Authors
Rollins, Angela L.; Eliacin, Johanne; Russ-Jara, Alissa L.; Monroe-Devita, Maria; Wasmuth, Sally; Flanagan, Mindy E.; Morse, Gary A.; Leiter, Michael; Salyers, Michelle P.
- Abstract
Objective: Clinician burnout in healthcare is extensive and of growing concern. In mental health and rehabilitation settings, research on interventions to improve burnout and work engagement is limited and rarely addresses organizational drivers of burnout. This study sought to elaborate on the organizational influence of burnout and work engagement in mental health. Methods: We randomly selected 40 mental health clinicians and managers who were participating in a burnout intervention and conducted semi-structured interviews to understand their views of organizational conditions impacting burnout and work engagement. Data were analyzed using a thematic analytical approach. Results: Analyses yielded three major themes where organizational contexts might reduce burnout and increase work engagement: (a) a work culture that prioritizes person-centered care over productivity and other performance metrics, (b) robust management skills and practices to overcome bureaucracy, and (c) opportunities for employee professional development and self-care. Participants also referenced three levels of the organizational context that they believed influenced burnout and work engagement: front-line supervisors and program managers, organizational executive leadership, and the larger health system. Conclusions and Implications for Practice: Findings point to several possible targets of intervention at various organizational levels that could guide the field toward more effective ways to reduce burnout and improve work engagement. Impact and Implications: Three major themes where organizational contexts might reduce burnout and increase work engagement were identified: a work culture that prioritizes person-centered care over productivity and other metrics, robust management skills and practices to overcome bureaucracy, and opportunities for employee professional development and self-care. These contexts, influenced at multiple organizational levels, could be targeted in future interventions that are effective in reducing burnout and improving work engagement.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout; MENTAL health personnel; RESEARCH methodology; MENTAL health; INTERVIEWING; PATIENT-centered care; JOB involvement; EXPERIENCE; QUALITATIVE research; PSYCHOSOCIAL factors; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; STATISTICAL sampling; THEMATIC analysis
- Publication
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal, 2021, Vol 44, Issue 3, p229
- ISSN
1095-158X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1037/prj0000472