Relation and effect of resilience on burnout in nurses: A literature review and meta-analysis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Castillo González, Andrea; Fuente Solana, Emilia I. De La; Cañadas De La Fuente, Guillermo ArturoEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Burnout Meta-analysis Nurses Prevalence Resilience Systematic review
Fecha
2023-03-31Referencia bibliográfica
Castillo González et al. Relation and effect of resilience on burnout in nurses: A literature review and meta-analysis[DOI: 10.1111/inr.12838]
Patrocinador
FEDER/Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación de la Junta de Andalucía, Grant/Award Number: Project: P20_00627Resumen
Aim: To study the relation between burnout and resilience and to identify the profile of
nurses presenting this quality.
Background and Introduction: Healthcare professionals are subject to high rates of
burnout. Resilience could be an important factor in preventing or alleviating this
condition.
Methods: The PubMed, ProQuest, Scopus and ScienceDirect databases were consulted
in February 2022 using the equation ‘burnout AND resilience AND nurs*’. The
inclusion criteria applied were that the texts should describe quantitative studies, be
published in English or Spanish, in any year, and be directly related to the question
considered. The meta-analysis was performed using StatsDirect statistical software.
Results: Analysis of the 29 studies shows that among the dimensions of burnout, nurses
are especially prone to emotional exhaustion, and are less affected by depersonalisation
and low personal accomplishment. Those who score highly for resilience tend to
have longer service experience, acceptable salaries and lesswork overload.Meta-analysis
reveals an inverse correlation between resilience and burnout (r = −0.41; n = 2750),
exhaustion (r=−0.27; n = 6966) and depersonalisation (r=−0.23; n = 6115).
Conclusion: Many nurses present low levels of resilience and suffer from burnout syndrome.
The application of programmes to enhance their resilience would help prevent
burnout and optimise the potential to provide quality health care.
Implications for nursing and health policy: Resilience is inversely correlated with
burnout, depersonalisation and emotional exhaustion. Accordingly, healthcare organisations
should develop and implement evidence-based programmes to foster nurses’
resilience and thus reduce their susceptibility to burnout.