The prevalence of occupational burnout and its individual and situational predictors among addiction therapists

Author:

Klingemann Justyna1ORCID,Mokros Łukasz2,Sienkiewicz-Jarosz Halina3,Świtaj Piotr4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Studies on Alcohol and Drug Dependence, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology , Warsaw , Poland

2. Second Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology , Warsaw , Poland

3. First Department of Neurology, Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology , Warsaw , Poland

4. Maria Sklodowska-Curie Medical Academy , Warsaw , Poland

Abstract

Abstract This study assesses the prevalence and individual and organizational predictors of occupational burnout among addiction therapists. A total of 452 addiction therapists from a representative sample of 184 Polish alcohol treatment facilities (outpatient and inpatient) participated in the study (facility response rate = 42%). The Oldenburg Burnout Inventory was used to measure occupational burnout, and 15 subscales of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire II were administered to assess psychosocial work conditions. In addition, the Coronavirus Anxiety Scale, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the abbreviated six-item De Jong Gierveld Loneliness Scale measured other important dimensions of addiction therapists' psychosocial functioning. Logistic regression was used for the analysis of the data. Occupational burnout was noticeably prevalent in the study group: 62% of respondents experienced exhaustion and 50% experienced disengagement from work, both to at least a moderate degree. Situational (organizational) variables were the most important predictors, explaining much more of the variance in both dimensions of burnout than the individual factors, of which only depression was significantly related to higher levels of exhaustion. Coronavirus anxiety played a marginal role in explaining the severity of burnout. The current study is one of the first attempts to assess the level of occupational burnout among addiction therapists and to comprehensively investigate the factors contributing to it. The findings provide useful information for the development of interventions aimed at preventing or reducing burnout in this professional group.

Funder

State Agency for the Prevention of Alcohol-Related Problems

National Centre of Prevention of Addictions

National Health Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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