A longitudinal study of burnout: The relative importance of dispositions and experiences
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Work & Stress
- Vol. 16 (1) , 1-17
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02678370110112506
Abstract
This study investigated the relative contribution of personality vs. environmental factors to the genesis of the burnout syndrome. A sample of 221 nursing students in Hamburg, Germany, were administered a battery of personality measures prior to any training. They were later asked to rate various stressors encountered during their practical training on hospital wards and also in nursing school, general aspects of ward climate, the frequency of private life events, and their own well-being on standard measures of burnout. Data were collected at seven time points over a period of 3 years, including the initial assessment (T1-T7). Only complete data sets (N = 123) were used for the analyses. Burnout scores from T2 to T7 were predicted, on the one hand, by the 36 'dispositional' scales of the initial battery and, on the other hand, by a set of 18 'experience-oriented' scales from the later questionnaire's concurrent administration. Scales reflecting well-being were predicted better by experiences than by dispositions. With scales reflecting attitudes towards oneself and patients, respectively, it was the other way around. Thus, both dispositional and experiential views of burnout receive some support here. Intraindividual change in burnout scores could not be linked to dispositional or experiential variables.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Test length and validity revisitedEuropean Journal of Personality, 1997
- The construct validity of two burnout measuresJournal of Organizational Behavior, 1993
- A Longitudinal Analysis of Burnout in the Health Care Setting: The Role of Personal DispositionsJournal of Personality Assessment, 1993
- A Longitudinal Study of Burnout among Supervisors and Managers: Comparisons between the Leiter and Maslach (1988) and Golembiewski et al. (1986) ModelsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1993
- Toward an understanding of the burnout phenomenon.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1986
- Stressful episodes reported by first-year student nurses: A descriptive accountSocial Science & Medicine, 1985
- A growth curve approach to the measurement of change.Psychological Bulletin, 1982
- Construction Strategies for Multiscale Personality InventoriesApplied Psychological Measurement, 1978