Burnout Syndrome in Health Care Personnel During the COVID-19 Pandemic
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5377/alerta.v7i1.16113Keywords:
COVID-19, Risk Factor, Health Personnel, Burnout Syndrome, Professional BurnoutAbstract
According to the WHO, occupational stress is a reaction that may occur when a person is faced with work-related demands and pressures that test the individual's ability to cope with certain situations, and it exacerbates in healthcare personnel who provide care to patients with COVID-19. That is, what results from the imbalance between the pressures and demands that the individual faces, on the one hand, and the knowledge acquired on the other hand. Burnout syndrome is a type of work-related stress that encompasses a state of physical, emotional and mental exhaustion that leads to individual and social consequences. The objective of this systematic review is to identify the risk factors for the development of Burnout Syndrome in health personnel related to the care of patients with COVID-19. A search was carried out in the PubMed database, including original articles, randomized studies, systematic reviews, and textbooks in Spanish and English, published during the period 2020-2023. The main risk factors for the development of Burnout Syndrome identified in the literature were youth, female sex, singleness, workload and the level of job satisfaction of the professionals.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Javier Isaac Molina Velásquez
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