Day, Arla L., et al. “Workplace Risks and Stressors As Predictors of Burnout: The Moderating Impact of Job Control and Team Efficacy”. Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences Revue Canadienne Des Sciences de L’Administration, vol. 26, no. 1, 2009, pp. 7-22, https://doi.org/10.1002/cjas.91.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Day, Arla L.
Author: Tallon, John M.
Author: Scott, Natasha
Author: Sibley, Aaron
Author: Ackroyd-Stolarz, Stacy
Date Issued
2009
Abstract

Air medical healthcare (AMH) professionals care for critically-ill individuals while conveying them to healthcare centres from distant, and frequently dangerous, locations. AMH professionals experience additional health and safety issues beyond the "typical" stressors faced by other healthcare professionals. Therefore, we integrated the safety and psychosocial health literatures to examine the relationship between workplace stressors (risk perception, worries, and patient-care barriers) and two components of burnout (emotional exhaustion; depersonalization), and the moderating impact of job control and team efficacy for 106 Canadian AMH professionals. Worries over medical hassles and barriers to patient care uniquely predicted emotional exhaustion. Lack of perceived control over one's job was related to exhaustion and depersonalization after controlling for stressors. Job control and team efficacy buffered some of the stressor-burnout relationships.

Language

  • English
Funding Note
Foundation for Air Medical Research
Page range
7-22
Host Title
Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences / Revue Canadienne des Sciences de l'Administration
Host Abbreviated Title
CAN J ADM SCI
Volume
26
Issue
1
Part Date
2009-03
ISSN
08250383
19364490

Department