Exploring burnout and uncertainty in healthcare professionals: a path analysis within the context of rare diseases DOI Creative Commons

David Zybarth,

Laura Inhestern, Corinna Bergelt

et al.

Frontiers in Public Health, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 13

Published: Feb. 27, 2025

Burnout among physicians has gained increasing attention in recent years. This issue arises not only from stressful working conditions and individual factors but also the correlation between burnout physicians' tolerance of uncertainty. association could be particularly important context rare diseases, which inherently present greater To date, no studies have explored this topic. Our exploratory study aimed to investigate associations uncertainty scores while considering secondary associated with diseases COVID-related stress. Although primary focus, we included stress due its impact during ongoing pandemic. We conducted an online survey using Physicians' Reaction Uncertainty Scale (PRU) Oldenburg Inventory (OLBI). Experience was quantified by assessing weekly hours devoted patients such conditions. a path analysis, initially fully recursive model subsequently eliminating non-significant paths. 128 (n = 73 female) participated survey, 31% them displaying significant scores. Notably, were found PRU subscale anxiety both dimensions burnout, as well disclosure dimension exhaustion. significantly exhaustion, experience disengagement. No observed The demonstrated excellent fit (RMSEA 0.055). results show that physician is pressing confirm increased

Language: Английский

Exploring burnout and uncertainty in healthcare professionals: a path analysis within the context of rare diseases DOI Creative Commons

David Zybarth,

Laura Inhestern, Corinna Bergelt

et al.

Frontiers in Public Health, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 13

Published: Feb. 27, 2025

Burnout among physicians has gained increasing attention in recent years. This issue arises not only from stressful working conditions and individual factors but also the correlation between burnout physicians' tolerance of uncertainty. association could be particularly important context rare diseases, which inherently present greater To date, no studies have explored this topic. Our exploratory study aimed to investigate associations uncertainty scores while considering secondary associated with diseases COVID-related stress. Although primary focus, we included stress due its impact during ongoing pandemic. We conducted an online survey using Physicians' Reaction Uncertainty Scale (PRU) Oldenburg Inventory (OLBI). Experience was quantified by assessing weekly hours devoted patients such conditions. a path analysis, initially fully recursive model subsequently eliminating non-significant paths. 128 (n = 73 female) participated survey, 31% them displaying significant scores. Notably, were found PRU subscale anxiety both dimensions burnout, as well disclosure dimension exhaustion. significantly exhaustion, experience disengagement. No observed The demonstrated excellent fit (RMSEA 0.055). results show that physician is pressing confirm increased

Language: Английский

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