Does volunteering decrease burnout? Healthcare professional and student perspectives on burnout and volunteering

Tai Metzger, Nathan Nguyen, Hillary Le, Daisy Havo, Katherine Ngo, Sebastian Lee, Timmy Nguyen, Quynhanh Nguyen, Leyna Tran, Nathan Tong, Collin Le, Rebecca Dudovitz
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Abstract

Burnout among healthcare providers is a significant crisis in our healthcare system, especially in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to understand what motivates healthcare workers and students to volunteer in their community as well as examine how volunteering relates to burnout. These findings can help health organizations better meet the needs of healthcare workers, as well as provide insights for non-profits that rely on volunteer professionals.Healthcare providers (N = 8), graduate healthcare students (N = 10), and undergraduate students (N = 14) who volunteered at community health fairs completed the OLBI burnout assessment and an individual semi-structured interview to characterize their attitudes toward volunteering and its relationship with burnout. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using a phenomenological approach, comparing themes across levels of burnout among providers and students.Participants described that feeling burnt out decreased one’s likelihood to volunteer, but also that volunteering prevented burnout. The OLBI scores showed that 79.2 and 20.8% of students were low and moderately burnt out respectively, and 87.5 and 12.5% of health professionals were low and moderately burnt out, respectively. Students volunteered for professional development while healthcare professionals cited a desire for a change in their day-to-day work as a reason to volunteer. Both students and health professionals often volunteered because they wanted to make a difference, it made them feel good, and/or they felt a responsibility to volunteer. COVID-19 had a wide range of effects on burnout and motivations to volunteer.Volunteering may be useful for preventing burnout among healthcare workers and students, but may not be helpful for those already experiencing burnout. Interview responses and the fact that none of the volunteers had high burnout levels according to their OLBI scores suggest those who choose to volunteer may be less burnt out. Healthcare organizations and schools can encourage volunteering by emphasizing the difference healthcare students and professionals can make through volunteering in the community. Increasing convenience and emphasizing professional development can help recruit and retain healthcare student volunteers. Highlighting the chance to diversify their scope of practice may help recruit and retain healthcare professional volunteers.
志愿服务会减少职业倦怠吗?医护人员和学生对职业倦怠和志愿服务的看法
医护人员的职业倦怠是我们医疗系统中的一个重大危机,尤其是在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下。本研究旨在了解促使医护人员和学生在社区中开展志愿服务的因素,并研究志愿服务与职业倦怠的关系。在社区健康展上做志愿者的医护人员(8 人)、医护专业研究生(10 人)和本科生(14 人)完成了 OLBI 职业倦怠评估和个人半结构化访谈,以了解他们对志愿服务的态度以及志愿服务与职业倦怠的关系。对访谈进行了记录、转录,并采用现象学方法进行了分析,比较了医疗服务提供者和学生不同程度的职业倦怠主题。OLBI 评分显示,分别有 79.2%和 20.8%的学生有低度和中度职业倦怠,分别有 87.5%和 12.5%的医务人员有低度和中度职业倦怠。学生志愿服务是为了专业发展,而医护人员志愿服务的原因则是希望改变日常工作。学生和医护人员参加志愿服务的原因往往是他们想有所作为,志愿服务让他们感觉良好,和/ 或他们觉得有责任参加志愿服务。COVID-19 对职业倦怠和志愿服务动机的影响范围很广。志愿服务可能有助于预防医护人员和 学生的职业倦怠,但对那些已经出现职业倦怠的人可能没有帮助。访谈中的回答以及根据 OLBI 分数显示志愿者的职业倦怠程度都不高这一事实表明,选择做志愿者的人的职业倦怠程度可能较低。医疗机构和学校可以通过强调医学生和专业人员在社区志愿服务中所能发挥的作用来鼓励志愿服务。增加便利性和强调专业发展有助于招募和留住医护学生志愿者。强调实践范围多样化的机会有助于招募和留住医护专业志愿者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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