La Trobe

Hospital staff report it is not burnout, but a normal stress reaction to an uncongenial work environment: findings from a qualitative study

journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-19, 23:24 authored by Madeleine Kendrick, Kevin Kendrick, Peter Morton, Nicholas TaylorNicholas Taylor, Sandra LeggatSandra Leggat
(1) Background: The issue of burnout in healthcare staff is frequently discussed in relation to occupational health. In this paper, we report healthcare staff experiences of stress and burnout. (2) Methods: In total, 72 healthcare staff were interviewed from psychiatry, surgery, and emergency departments at an Australian public health service. The sample included doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, administrators, and front-line managers. Interview transcripts were thematically analyzed, with participant experiences interpreted against descriptors of burnout in Maslach’s Burnout Inventory and the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-11). (3) Results: Staff experiences closely matched the ICD-11 description of stress associated with working in an uncongenial workplace, with few reported experiences which matched the ICD-11 descriptors of burnout. (4) Conclusion: Uncongenial workplaces in public health services contribute to healthcare staff stress. While previous approaches have focused on biomedical assistance for individuals, our findings suggest that occupational health approaches to addressing health care staff stress need greater focus on the workplace as a social determinant of health. This finding is significant as organizational remedies to uncongenial stress are quite different from remedies to burnout.<p></p>

History

Publication Date

2020-06-09

Journal

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

Volume

17

Issue

11

Article Number

4107

Pagination

11p.

Publisher

MDPI

ISSN

1661-7827

Rights Statement

© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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