Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif
The general purpose of this study was to investigate the extent of burnout experienced by healthcare professionals working in obstetrics & gynaecology units in public hospital of Islamabad, Pakistan. Specifically, this research attempted to explore the contributing factors of burnout, by corr...
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my.um.stud.122572021-05-16T17:51:40Z Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif Sabin, Kashif R Medicine (General) RA Public aspects of medicine The general purpose of this study was to investigate the extent of burnout experienced by healthcare professionals working in obstetrics & gynaecology units in public hospital of Islamabad, Pakistan. Specifically, this research attempted to explore the contributing factors of burnout, by correlating the burnout scores of exhaustion and disengagement, with the sociodemographic variables. The main objectives of the study were: (i) to assess the levels of burnout as determined by the extent of exhaustion and disengagement among the study participants, and (ii) to compare the mean scores of exhaustion and disengagement among healthcare professionals based on different demographic characteristics: (a) age, (b) gender, (c) marital status, (d) level of education, (e) work experience, (f) working hours, and (g) salary of the participants. This study used a cross-sectional, survey research design for data collection. Demographic information, data on disengagement, and exhaustion were collected via a 25 items online survey. Oldenburg Burnout Inventory OLBI was used as the study instrument. OLBI consisted of 16 items, 8 items each for exhaustion and disengagement subscales. Responses were recorded on a four-point Likert scale. Data were analysed by using IBM Statistical Packages for the Social Sciences, IBM SPSS version 26 software package. Response rate of the survey was 71.83%, as 102 of the total 142 eligible health professionals responded to the survey. Ten (9.8%) participants were more than 50 years old, 29 (34.3%) 40-49 years, 28 (27.5%) 30-39 years, and 35 (34.3%) participants aged 20-29 years. Majority of the respondents were female (96.1%). Sixty-seven (65.7%) were iv married. The study sample of 102 consisted of 55 doctors, 43 nurses and 4 operation theatre technicians. Results of the study reported five interesting findings. First, there were high mean exhaustion and disengagement levels: 2.53+0.54 and 2.14+0.57, respectively, indicating that on an average, the study participants experienced above threshold levels of burnout. Approximately 40% of the participants were burned out (experiencing both exhaustion and disengagement), while around 15% did not show burnout at all (both exhaustion and disengagement below threshold levels). Second finding was that above 80% of the participants were exhausted, whereas disengagement was present in 44%. Third, that majority of the participants were females (96.1%). Fourth, that the participants more than 50 years old, were significantly more exhausted and more disengaged as compared to the younger participants. Fifth finding was that healthcare workers working more than 60 hours per week were significantly more exhausted and more disengaged than those working fewer hours than them. This research concluded that there are considerably high burnout levels among obstetrics and gynaecology healthcare professionals in Pakistan. This needs further in-depth investigation and possible interventions to avoid serious consequences and provide better human services. There is a need for workplace rules and policies regarding optimum acceptable working hours, favourable work environments, appropriate work-life balance, and well-designed wellness programs for all healthcare workers, especially for those working in obstetrics and gynaecology. Appropriate measures on individual, departmental, organizational, and government levels are required to address this problem. 2020 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12257/4/sabin.pdf Sabin, Kashif (2020) Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif. Masters thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12257/ |
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R Medicine (General) RA Public aspects of medicine Sabin, Kashif Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
description |
The general purpose of this study was to investigate the extent of burnout experienced by
healthcare professionals working in obstetrics & gynaecology units in public hospital of
Islamabad, Pakistan. Specifically, this research attempted to explore the contributing
factors of burnout, by correlating the burnout scores of exhaustion and disengagement,
with the sociodemographic variables. The main objectives of the study were: (i) to assess
the levels of burnout as determined by the extent of exhaustion and disengagement among
the study participants, and (ii) to compare the mean scores of exhaustion and
disengagement among healthcare professionals based on different demographic
characteristics: (a) age, (b) gender, (c) marital status, (d) level of education, (e) work
experience, (f) working hours, and (g) salary of the participants.
This study used a cross-sectional, survey research design for data collection.
Demographic information, data on disengagement, and exhaustion were collected via a
25 items online survey. Oldenburg Burnout Inventory OLBI was used as the study
instrument. OLBI consisted of 16 items, 8 items each for exhaustion and disengagement
subscales. Responses were recorded on a four-point Likert scale. Data were analysed by
using IBM Statistical Packages for the Social Sciences, IBM SPSS version 26 software
package.
Response rate of the survey was 71.83%, as 102 of the total 142 eligible health
professionals responded to the survey. Ten (9.8%) participants were more than 50 years
old, 29 (34.3%) 40-49 years, 28 (27.5%) 30-39 years, and 35 (34.3%) participants aged
20-29 years. Majority of the respondents were female (96.1%). Sixty-seven (65.7%) were
iv
married. The study sample of 102 consisted of 55 doctors, 43 nurses and 4 operation
theatre technicians.
Results of the study reported five interesting findings. First, there were high mean
exhaustion and disengagement levels: 2.53+0.54 and 2.14+0.57, respectively, indicating
that on an average, the study participants experienced above threshold levels of burnout.
Approximately 40% of the participants were burned out (experiencing both exhaustion
and disengagement), while around 15% did not show burnout at all (both exhaustion and
disengagement below threshold levels). Second finding was that above 80% of the
participants were exhausted, whereas disengagement was present in 44%. Third, that
majority of the participants were females (96.1%). Fourth, that the participants more than
50 years old, were significantly more exhausted and more disengaged as compared to the
younger participants. Fifth finding was that healthcare workers working more than 60
hours per week were significantly more exhausted and more disengaged than those
working fewer hours than them.
This research concluded that there are considerably high burnout levels among obstetrics
and gynaecology healthcare professionals in Pakistan. This needs further in-depth
investigation and possible interventions to avoid serious consequences and provide better
human services. There is a need for workplace rules and policies regarding optimum
acceptable working hours, favourable work environments, appropriate work-life balance,
and well-designed wellness programs for all healthcare workers, especially for those
working in obstetrics and gynaecology. Appropriate measures on individual,
departmental, organizational, and government levels are required to address this problem. |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Sabin, Kashif |
author_facet |
Sabin, Kashif |
author_sort |
Sabin, Kashif |
title |
Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
title_short |
Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
title_full |
Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
title_fullStr |
Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
title_full_unstemmed |
Occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology department of a public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan / Sabin Kashif |
title_sort |
occupational burnout among healthcare professionals in obstetrics and gynecology department of a public hospital in islamabad, pakistan / sabin kashif |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12257/4/sabin.pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12257/ |
_version_ |
1738506588602236928 |