This evidence theme on the consequences of burnout is a summary of one of the key topics identified by a scoping review of the staff burnout research. If you need more specific or comprehensive information on this topic, try using our PubMed searches provided below.
The 2022 scoping review found fifteen studies on the consequences of burnout among aged care workers. [4-18] The 2023 update found an additional five studies that contributed this theme. [19-23]
High burnout among aged care workers may decrease:
- Work satisfaction. [4, 11, 12]
- Job autonomy. [10]
- Work engagement. [4, 18]
- Work accomplishment. [9]
- Work-life balance. [14]
- Organisational productivity. [19-23]
- Quality of care provided to clients [19-23], for example, rushing or missing to provide essential care tasks. [13]
- Client-centred care. [9]
- Organisational citizenship behaviours, [19] such as demonstrating more hostile behaviour (for high emotional exhaustion) [15] or becoming abusive towards those in their care (high burnout and depersonalisation). [5]
- The desire to attend self-development training. [17]
High burnout may also lead to:
- Metal health disorders (high depersonalisation and emotional exhaustion). [7]
- High rates of absenteeism and workforce turnover. [8, 18-23] One study reported no association between burnout and turnover rates. [6]
- Low to moderate levels of health problems. [7]
- Negative patient outcomes. [16] The study emphasised that the relationship between burnout and client outcomes may differ in strength (depending on the type of patient outcome) and between each burnout sub-scale. [16]