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Burnout at the hospital: Healthcare workers coping with COVID-19 stress

Burnout no hospital: enfrentamento do estresse da COVID-19 por trabalhadores da saúde

Abstract

Objective

The first wave of COVID-19 was challenging for healthcare workers. This study analyzed the ways of coping with stress at a university hospital.

Method

A Sociodemographic Characterization, Risk and Exposure Assessment, Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT-23), and COVID-19 Coping Scale were responded online by 181 professionals.

Results

The sample was composed mainly of women, white, married, physicians, with one job. Over 80% of the sample were at high exposure and risk for infection, with 17.1% having tested positive. The most reported stressors were risks of transmitting the disease, being hospitalized, and being separated from loved ones; 11% presented the risk of/probable burnout, with exhaustion and emotional impairment. They presented adaptive coping strategies, such as problem-solving and information-seeking, with a negative correlation between adaptive coping and burnout. Being a physician with maladaptive coping, in psychiatric care, and having religious beliefs were predictors of burnout.

Conclusion

Promoting adaptive coping may improve the mental health of these workers.

Keywords
Adaptation, psychological; Burnout, psychological; COVID-19; Health professionals

Programa de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Campinas Núcleo de Editoração SBI - Campus II, Av. John Boyd Dunlop, s/n. Prédio de Odontologia, 13060-900 Campinas - São Paulo Brasil, Tel./Fax: +55 19 3343-7223 - Campinas - SP - Brazil
E-mail: psychologicalstudies@puc-campinas.edu.br