Title: Stress
1 Stress Burnout in the AOD Field Prevalence,
Aetiology the Effectiveness of Workplace
Interventions
- Chelsea Todd, PhD Candidate
- National Centre for Education Training on
Addiction (NCETA), Flinders University - Prof. Ann Roche, Principal Supervisor
- Assoc. Prof. Malcolm Bond, Co-supervisor
-
SA Public Health Health Promotion Conference,
Making Research Matter Translating Research
into Health Policy Practice 21
October 2006
2Overview
- The nature of work in health human services
What do we know about stress burnout? Whats
being done about it? - PhD program of work
Assessing current stress burnout levels AND
implementing evaluating intervention - Implications for public health policy practice
3Stress Burnout in AOD Work
- AOD work can involve inherent difficulties
- AOD workers at risk of stress burnout
- Frontline AOD workers (N 1345) (Duraisingam et
al., 2006) - Managers in AOD orgs (N 280) (Duraisingam et
al., 2006) - Stress burnout in health profs is linked with
- Turnover intention
- Job (dis)satisfaction
- Job performance
- Recruitment retention challenges
4Conceptualising Stress Burnout
- STRESSORS
- client issues
- lack of support
- workload
- lack of autonomy
- STRESS
- psychological
- depression
- anxiety
- somatic
BURNOUT
5Burnout-Engagement Continuum
BURNOUT
- Engagement positive antithesis of burnout
- a persistent, positive affective-motivational
state of fulfillment in employees that is
characterised by vigor, dedication and
absorption (Maslach et al., 2001, p. 417) - Positively assoc with organisational commitment
ENGAGEMENT
6Burnout - 3 Dimensions (Maslach)
Emotional Exhaustion
Depersonalisation
- Lack of energy
- Emotional resources used up
- Compassion Fatigue
- Detachment from clients
- Negative cynical attitude
Reduced Personal Accomplishment
- Perceived decrease in efficacy competence
(Maslach Leiter,1997)
7Factors Impacting on Stress Burnout
Skinner Roche (2005)
8Antecedents to Stress Burnout
Unfairness
Lack of Control
Insufficient Reward
BURNOUT
Value Conflict
Work Overload
Breakdown of Sense of Community
(Maslach Leiter,1997)
9Consequences of Stress Burnout
- 1. Organisational functioning
- ? Job satisfaction (? work effectiveness, ?
turnover) - ? Org commitment (? turnover intent, ? job
involvement) - ? Turnover
- 2. Worker health wellbeing
- Depression
- Psychosomatic complaints
- Health problems
- 3. Client outcomes (Garmen et al., 2002)
10Case Study of Burnout
- I am a psychologist, going on my third
year of employment as a therapist in a
community mental health center. I have seen
myself change from an avid, eager, open-minded,
caring person to an extremely cynical,
not-giving-a-damn individual in just two and a
half yearsIve gone through drinking to relax
enough to go to sleep, tranquilizers, stretching
my sick leave to its ultimate limit, and so onIt
hurts to feel like a failure as a therapist in
terms of not being able to handle the pressure
- (Maslach, 1982, p.5)
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12Need for Better Intervention Studies
- We know that
- Stress burnout is a problem
- Negative repercussions are great
for workers, organisations clients - Intervention strategies have focussed on
individual - We also need to intervene at workplace level
- BUT there is a lack of large, high quality
studies evaluating organisation interventions
(Edwards Burnard, 2003)
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14Research Questions
- Prevalence of stress burnout in AOD workers in
Australia? - Contributory factors to stress burnout amongst
the Australian AOD workforce? - Effectiveness of X intervention for
alleviating - Stressors
- Burnout
- improving
- Job satisfaction
- Intention to remain with organisation
15Theoretical Framework
- Job Demands-Resources Model (Demerouti et al.,
2001)
- Job Resources
- Autonomy
- Social support
- Job Demands
- Work overload
- Emotional demands
- Cognitive demands
MOTIVATION
STRESS
Exhaustion
Engagement
Bakker et al., 2005
16Study Design
- Participants AOD workers in Australia
- Randomised Controlled Trial
- Pre-post-followup
Follow-up (6-12 month)
INTERVENTION (Random allocation)
Baseline
Post
Intervention
Control
17Baseline Survey
- STRESSORS
- client issues
- lack of support
- workload
- lack of autonomy
BURNOUT
- STRESS
- psychological
- depression
- anxiety
- physical / somatic
- General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12)
- Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ)
1. Maslach (MBI) 2. Copenhagen (CBI)
18Burnout Measures
- Maslach Burnout Inventory (Maslach Jackson,
1986) - Most commonly used burnout measure
- Emotional exhaustion
- Depersonalisation
- Reduced personal accomplishment
- Copenhagen Burnout Inventory (Kristensen et al.,
2005) - Personal burnout
- Work-related burnout
- Client-related burnout
19Outcome Measures
- Turnover intention
- Job satisfaction
- Organisational commitment
- Absenteeism
20Workplace Interventions
Focus of the intervention
21Stress Burnout Intervention
Schaufeli Enzmann (1998)
22Towards a Systems-Focussed Approach
23Identifying Suitable Interventions
- Examples (Cochrane Systematic Review
Ruotsalainen et al., 2006) - Role-playing and experiential exchanges
- Mobilizing support from colleagues
- Problem solving and decision-making skills
- Service delivery changes
- Support and advice from supervisors
- Evidence in literature for effectiveness?
- Feasible?
- Informed by baseline survey findings?
24Fixing the Workplace vs. Fixing the Worker
25Policy Practice Implications
- Establishing realistic strategies to implement at
workplace level to ameliorate negative impact of
stressors for
- Individuals
- Organisations
- Clients
26Contact Details
- Chelsea Todd
- NCETA, Flinders University
- chelsea.todd_at_flinders.edu.au
- (08) 8201 7543