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Title: | Harmonized definition of occupational burnout: A systematic review, semantic analysis, and Delphi consensus in 29 countries | Authors: | Guseva Canu, Irina Marca, Sandy Carla Dell'Oro, Francesca Balázs, Ádám Bergamaschi, Enrico Besse, Christine Bianchi, Renzo Jovanka Bislimovska Koscec Bjelajac, Adrijana Bugge, Merete Busneag, Carmen Iliana Çağlayan, Çiğdem Cernițanu, Mariana Costa Pereira, Cristiana Dernovšček Hafner, Nataša Droz, Nadia Eglite, Maija Godderis, Lode Gündel, Harald Hakanen, Jari J Iordache, Raluca Maria Khireddine-Medouni, Imane Kiran, Sibel Larese-Filon, Francesca Lazor-Blanchet, Catherine Légeron, Patrick Loney, Tom Majery, Nicole Merisalu, Eda Mehlum, Ingrid Sivesind Michaud, Laurent Dragan Mijakoski Jordan Minov Modenese, Alberto Molan, Marija van der Molen, Henk Nena, Evangelia Nolimal, Dusan Otelea, Marina Pletea, Elisabeta Pranjic, Nurka Rebergen, David Reste, Jelena Schernhammer, Eva Wahlen, Anny |
Keywords: | Delphi consensus epidemiology exhaustion job stress occupational burnout occupational health semantic analysis systematic review |
Issue Date: | 1-Dec-2020 | Publisher: | Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health | Project: | Action CA 16216 "Network on the Coordination and Harmonisation of European Occupational Cohorts” (OMEGA-NET) | Journal: | Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health | Abstract: | Objective A consensual definition of occupational burnout is currently lacking. We aimed to harmonize the definition of occupational burnout as a health outcome in medical research and reach a consensus on this definition within the Network on the Coordination and Harmonisation of European Occupational Cohorts (OMEGA-NET). Methods First, we performed a systematic review in MEDLINE, PsycINFO and Embase (January 1990 to August 2018) and a semantic analysis of the available definitions. We used the definitions of burnout and burnout-related concepts from the Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms (SNOMED-CT) to formulate a consistent harmonized definition of the concept. Second, we sought to obtain the Delphi consensus on the proposed definition. Results We identified 88 unique definitions of burnout and assigned each of them to 1 of the 11 original definitions. The semantic analysis yielded a first proposal, further reformulated according to SNOMED-CT and the panelists` comments as follows: "In a worker, occupational burnout or occupational physical AND emotional exhaustion state is an exhaustion due to prolonged exposure to work-related problems". A panel of 50 experts (researchers and healthcare professionals with an interest for occupational burnout) reached consensus on this proposal at the second round of the Delphi, with 82% of experts agreeing on it. Conclusion This study resulted in a harmonized definition of occupational burnout approved by experts from 29 countries within OMEGA-NET. Future research should address the reproducibility of the Delphi consensus in a larger panel of experts, representing more countries, and examine the practicability of the definition. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/10508 | DOI: | 10.5271/sjweh.3935 |
Appears in Collections: | Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles |
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Guseva Canu et al. 2020 Scand J Work Environ Health.pdf | Manuscript | 889.22 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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