An investigation into burnout among emergency care providers at a private ambulance emergency medical service in Gauteng
Date
2018
Authors
Sibanda, Thulani Thomas
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Abstract
Introduction
Being a healthcare provider can be stressful as the job places demands on healthcare
practitioners’ physical, emotional and mental functioning. The stress emergency care
providers experience is unique and severe because they are exposed to an array of
occupational stressors in their everyday lives. They deal with the very sick and dying,
respond to emergencies that put their lives and the public’s lives at risk, they are even
sometimes the victims of crime while they perform their duties. All of these
occupational stressors create a risk of burnout for the emergency care provider.
Emergency care providers who suffer from burnout are more likely to make clinical
errors when treating patients and no longer have the ability to show empathy to their
patients. Severe burnout may result in depression and suicidal behaviour.
Aim of this study
The aim of this study was to investigate the burnout of emergency care providers at
a private ambulance emergency medical service in Gauteng to understand the extent
and impact of burnout on emergency care providers. The objectives of the study were
to assess burnout among emergency care providers using the Copenhagen Burnout
Inventory (CBI), to establish whether the levels of burnout vary among different
emergency care providers, and to establish if there is a relationship between burnout
and the demographic variables gender, marital status and qualification. A further
objective was to establish if there is a relationship between variables and distractor
questions.
Methodology
This study was a quantitative study in the form of a cross-sectional survey utilizing the
CBI as the burnout measurement tool. Results
The findings of the study highlight that burnout is high among emergency care
providers. Thirty percent of emergency care providers who participated in the study
suffered from burnout. Most of the emergency care providers experienced higher
levels of ‘personal burnout’ and ‘work burnout’ when compared with ‘burnout related
to patient care’.
Conclusion
These findings are cause for concern, not only for the patients they attend to but also
for the emergency care providers themselves.
Description
A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of
Health Science: Emergency Medical Care in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the
Durban University of Technology, 2018.
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Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3835