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Workplace violence and development of burnout symptoms: a prospective cohort study on 1823 social educators

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International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Purpose

Burnout and workplace violence (WPV) have been associated in cross-sectional studies, but longitudinal studies with solid methods and adequate sample sizes are lacking. This study investigates whether WPV increases burnout symptoms during a 12-month period.

Methods

Questionnaire data were collected on 1823 social educators at baseline and 12-month follow-up, coupled with additionally 12 monthly text-message surveys on exposure to WPV. Using general linear modelling for repeated measures, we estimated change over time in burnout symptoms in three WPV exposure groups (none, low, high).

Results

A time by exposure to WPV interaction existed for development of burnout; F(2) = 7.2, p = 0.001 η2 = 0.011. Burnout increased significantly within the group of low exposure; F(1) = 6.8, p = 0.01 and high exposure; F(1) = 6.7 p = 0.001, but not within the non-exposed F(1) = 2.1 p = 0.15. At follow-up, both the low exposed and high exposed had significantly higher levels of burnout compared to the non-exposed.

Conclusion

Exposure to WPV increases level of burnout within a 12-month period. We propose that assessment of burnout in future studies should utilize instruments capable of detecting small changes. We further propose that prevention against employee burnout could be improved using monitoring targeted at employees exposed to WPV.

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Authors

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Correspondence to Jesper Pihl-Thingvad.

Ethics declarations

Ethical approval

According to Danish law, survey-based studies are not considered for approval by the Scientific Ethics Committee.

Informed consent

All respondents gave their informed consent when replying to the questionnaire and the project procedure for treatment of sensitive data was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency, Journal #15/96549.

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Appendix

Appendix

Table 4 Risk of being in the highest 25 percentile of burnout at follow-up presented in odds ratio with 95% confidence intervals in bracket (95% CI) and level of significance (p) in each of the four models of adjustment, with non-exposed as reference group

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Pihl-Thingvad, J., Elklit, A., Brandt, L.P.A. et al. Workplace violence and development of burnout symptoms: a prospective cohort study on 1823 social educators. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 92, 843–853 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00420-019-01424-5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00420-019-01424-5

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