Burnout, Work Engagement and Performance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 56
About This Presentation
Title:

Burnout, Work Engagement and Performance

Description:

Definition: Syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation, and reduced ... Psychosomatic complaints. Infections. Work-related attitudes. Job satisfaction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1247
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 57
Provided by: drarnol
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Burnout, Work Engagement and Performance


1
Burnout, Work Engagement and Performance
Evangelia Demerouti, PhD Athens, May 2004
2
Outline
  • Burnout background
  • Measurement of Burnout
  • Research Findings
  • Engagement
  • Burnout Interventions

3
Burnout discovery
  • Since 1974 (Freudenberger)
  • Definition Syndrome of emotional exhaustion,
    depersonalisation, and reduced personal
    accomplishment that can occur among people who do
    people work of some kind (Maslach, 1982)
  • Main cause Emotional demands posed by clients

4
Burnout reasons for interest
  • Negative consequences for employees (lack of
    interest in work existential doubts)
  • Consequences for clients (low quality of service)
  • High costs for organizations
  • Its excessive spread (around 20 of the
    employees)
  • Important social problem but still unclear
    concept

5
Causes of burnout
  • Work pressure
  • Emotional demands
  • Role problems
  • Work-family conflict
  • Social support
  • Feedback
  • Participation in decision making

6
Consequences of burnout
  • Individual level
  • Depression
  • Psychosomatic complaints
  • Infections
  • Work-related attitudes
  • Job satisfaction
  • Organizational commitment
  • Turnover intention
  • Organizational level
  • Absenteeism
  • Turnover

7
Burnout and Personality
  • Neuroticism
  • Low extraversion
  • Low hardiness
  • External locus of control
  • Low self-esteem
  • Type A personality
  • Passive coping style

8
Depression vs. Burnout (clinical)
  • Depression
  • Depressive mood
  • Unhappiness, displeasure
  • Weight loss
  • Fearfulness
  • Sleeping problems (wake up early)
  • Guilt feelings
  • Suicide thoughts
  • Indecisiveness
  • Attribution of the problem sickness
  • General
  • Low vitality
  • Burnout
  • Anger, aggression
  • Low pleasure
  • No weight symptoms
  • No fearfulness
  • Sleeping problems (difficulty to fall asleep)
  • Guilt feelings
  • No suicide thoughts
  • Indecisiveness (complaint)
  • Attribution of the problem work
  • Work-related
  • Moderate vitality

9
Occupation-independent conceptualisation of
burnout
  • Related to traditional work stressors
  • Work stressors better predictors than working
    with people (Schaufeli Enzmann, 1998)
  • Burnout symptoms parallel to phenomena in
    non-service occupations (e.g., fatigue,
    alienation, withdrawal, efficacy)
  • Artefact of the utilized research designs
    alternative hypotheses untested

10
Measurement of Burnout
11
Two ways of diagnosis
  • (Company) doctors using diagnostic session -
    decision tree
  • Questionnaire (self-reports)

12
MBI OLBI
  • Emotional Exhaustion (9) feelings of being
    emotionally overextended and drained by others
  • Depersonalization (5) feelings of callous,
    cynical and detached responses toward clients
  • Reduced Personal Ac-complishment (8) decline in
    ones feelings of competence and successful
    achievement in work with people
  • Exhaustion (7) feelings of emotional emptiness,
    overtaxing from work, strong need for rest and a
    state of physical exhaustion
  • Distancing from work (8) distancing oneself from
    ones work, negative attitudes and behaviours
    toward work in general, work contents and object

13
Oldenburg Burnout Inventory
  • Positive and negative worded items
  • Only the core dimensions of burnout
  • Not context-specific
  • Based on theory and not on empirical findings
  • Cut-off scores - clinical burnout - above
    the 75 percentile on both
    dimensions

Demerouti, 1999
14
Example items OLBI MBI-GS
  • Exhaustion (OLBI)
  • After my work, I usually feel worn out and
    weary
  • After my work, I usually feel totally fit for my
    leisure activities (R).
  • Distancing from work (OLBI)
  • I usually talk about my work in a derogatory
    way
  • I get more and more engaged in my work (R)
  • (1 totally disagree, 4 totally agree)
  • Exhaustion (MBI-GS)
  • I feel burned out from my work, I feel tired
    when I get up in the morning and have to face
    another day on the job.
  • Cynicism (MBI-GS)
  • I have become less enthusiastic about my work,
    I have become more cynical about whether my work
    contributes anything.
  •  Professional efficacy (MBI-GS)
  • I feel I am making an effective contribution to
    what this organization does, In my opinion, I
    am good at my job.
  • (0 never, 6 every day)

15
Theoretical explanations
16
Demand-Control Model
Job Demands
Karasek, 1979
17
Effort-Reward Imbalance Model
Siegrist, 1996
18
Inequity Model
Schaufeli et al. 1996
19
Job Demands
Role conflict
Work-Home
Work times
Emotional Demands
Work Pressure
20
Job Resources
Skill Variety
Possibilities Self-growth
Supervisory Coaching
Social Support
Autonomy
21
Balance
Role conflict
Skill Variety
Work-Home
Possibilities Self-growth
Work times
Coaching
Emotional Demands
Social Support
Work pressure
Autonomy
22
Job Demands-Resources Model
Mental
Job Demands
(Impaired) Health

Emotional
-
Physical
Organizational Outcomes
Etc.
-
Support
Job Resources
Motivation


Autonomy
Feedback
Etc.
Demerouti et al., 2001
23
Assumptions
  • Unique Working Environment for every occupational
    group
  • 2 categories Job Demands and Job Resources
  • 2 Processes
  • Health Impairment process
  • Motivational process
  • Job Resources can be Buffer against Job Demands
  • Job Demands may undermine the Motivational Impact
    of Job Resources

24
Research findings
25
Human services, production, ATC, N
374 Self-reports, observers ratings (italics)
Demerouti et al., 2001
26
Demerouti et al., 2000
27
Food Processing Industry, N214
Job Demands
Burnout
T2 LT Absence
WP
.63
.21
.92
Reorgan
.58
-.68
Job Resources
T2 ST Absence
.62
Autonomy
Commitment
.96
-.20
Participation
.67
Bakker, Demerouti, De Boer Schaufeli, 2003
28
(No Transcript)
29
Human Services, N146
Bakker, Demerouti Verbeke, 2004
30
(Im) Balance
Impaired health Low motivation
Impaired health Motivation
H
JOB DEMANDS
Health Low motivation
Health Motivation
L
L
H
JOB RESOURCES
31
Study among salespersons (N 650)
  • burned-out salespeople lowest in-role
    extra-role performance
  • non burned-out salespeople highest in-role
    extra-role performance
  • customer-exhausted among the highest performers
    (in-role extra-role performance) ? compensation
    strategy
  • customer-depersonalized in-role performance
    uninfluenced, extra-role performance diminished ?
    loss-based selection, in a proactive manner
  • ineffective highest similarity with the
    burned-out group (low in- extra-role
    performance) ? feelings of in-efficiency poor
    professional self-esteem
  • !!! The relationship between burnout
    performance is not clear cut!

32
Reciprocal effects
  • Exhaustion ? Errors ? more JD ? more Exhaustion
  • Depersonalisation ? negative behaviour ? less JR
    ? more Depersonalisation
  • Competence ? good performance ? more JR ? more
    Competence
  • Negative or Positive Spiral...

33
Bakker, Demerouti, van Dierendock Schaufeli,
submitted
34
Work engagement
35
Towards positive psychology
  • Most psychologists are busy with sicknesses
    instead of well-being
  • - Publications on negative vs. positive states
    are 171 (Diener et al., 1999)
  • Causes of sicknesses are not identical with the
    causes of well-being
  • Absence of sickness does not automatically mean
    presence of well-being
  • Different focus instead of treatment and
    prevention, improvement and optimalization!

36
Burnout vs. Engagement
Exhaustion
Red. Competence
Cynicism
Absorption
Vigor
Dedication
37
Work engagement definition
  • Engagement a positive, fulfilling, work-related
    state of mind that is characterized by vigor,
    dedication, and absorption (Schaufeli et al.,
    2004). It refers to a persistent and pervasive
    affectivecognitive state that is not focused on
    any particular object, event, individual, or
    behavior.
  • Dimensions
  • Vigor is characterized by high levels of energy
    and mental resilience while working, the
    willingness to invest effort in ones work, and
    persistence also in the face of difficulties.
  • Dedication is characterized by a sense of
    significance, enthusiasm, inspiration, pride, and
    challenge.
  • Absorption is characterized by being fully
    concentrated and happily engrossed in ones work,
    whereby time passes quickly and one has
    difficulties with detaching oneself from work.

38
Work Engagement
  • Vigor
  • At my work, I feel bursting with energy
  • At my job, I feel strong and vigorous
  • Dedication
  • To me, my job is challenging
  • I am enthusiastic about my job
  • Absorption
  • When I am working, I forget everything else
    around me
  • I am completely immersed in my work

39
Engaged Employees
  • Take personal initiative
  • Generate their own positive feedback
  • Are also engaged outside their work
  • Are tired in a different way
  • Also want to do other things than working

40
Prevalence

41
Home Care, N45.000
Workload
Job Demands
Burnout
Client Satisfaction
Emotions

-
Intimity
Work-Home
-
Support
Job Resources
Engagement
Efficiency
Autonomy


Feedback
Coaching
Source Taris, Bakker et al. (in prep.)
42
(No Transcript)
43
Burnout interventions
44
Overview of the strategies
Focus
Individual
Organization
Aim
Identification
Primary prevention
Secundary prevention
Treatment
45
Organisational strategies
  • Risk inventarisation
  • Screening

Identification
Primary prevention
  • Regulation of work pressure
  • Job design / task content
  • Conflict management
  • Management Development

Secondary prevention
  • Contact company doctor
  • Social-medical team

Treatment
46
Individual strategies
  • Self-monitoring
  • Self-assessment

Identification
Primary prevention
  • Didactic stress management
  • Work-Family balance

Secondary prevention
  • Time management
  • Relaxation training
  • Social medical supervision
  • Psychotherapy

Treatment
47
Success (meta-analysis)
k
N
d
Effect
Cogn. therapy
18
858
.68
moderate
17
982
.35
small
Relaxation
8
470
.51
moderate
Multimodal
5
1463
.08
non-sign.
Organization
Van der Klink et al. (2000)
48
Critical success factors
  • Stepwise systematic approach
  • Adequate diagnosis and analyses of the problems
  • Combination of work- and person-oriented
    approaches
  • Active participation of all involving parties
  • Commitment of the top

Kompier Cooper (1999)
49
JDR-Project
50
JDR-Project
51
Feedback Well-Being
Source www.hcmg.co.uk
52
Feedback Job Demands
Source www.hcmg.co.uk
53
Feedback Job Resources
Source www.hcmg.co.uk
54
(No Transcript)
55
Summary and Future
  • Burnout Syndrome of our times
  • More clarity regarding causality consequences
  • Multi-dimensional approaches
  • JDR-model flexible and static structure
  • Scientific - Integration
  • Practice Application to organizations, teams,
    and individuals
  • Future Research
  • Longitudinal, positive health indicators,
    reciprocal relations, burnout contagion and
    crossover, international research

56
E.Demerouti_at_fss.uu.nl
  • Thank you for your attention!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com