“I feel broken”: Chronicling burnout, mental health, and the limits of individual resilience in nursing

Author:

Akoo Chaman1,McMillan Kimberly1ORCID,Price Sheri2,Ingraham Kenchera3,Ayoub Abby1,Rolle Sands Shamel3,Shankland Mylène4,Bourgeault Ivy5

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. School of Nursing Dalhousie University Nova Scotia Ontario Canada

3. School of Nursing University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. School of Sociological and Anthropological Studies University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractHealthcare systems and health professionals are facing a litany of stressors that have been compounded by the pandemic, and consequently, this has further perpetuated suboptimal mental health and burnout in nursing. The purpose of this paper is to report select findings from a larger, national study exploring gendered experiences of mental health, leave of absence (LOA), and return to work from the perspectives of nurses and key stakeholders. Given the breadth of the data, this paper will focus exclusively on the qualitative results from 53 frontline Canadian nurses who were purposively recruited for their workplace insight. This paper focuses on the substantive theme of “Breaking Point,” in which nurses articulated a multiplicity of stress points at the individual, organizational, and societal levels that amplified burnout and accelerated mental health LOA from the workplace. These findings exemplify the complexities that underlie nurses' mental health and burnout and highlight the urgent need for multipronged individual, organizational, and structural interventions. Robust and timely interventions are needed to restore the health of the nursing profession and sustain its future.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

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5. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. (2022).Australia facing nursing shortage as more than two years of COVID takes its toll.https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-07-22/nursing-shortage-on-the-cards-due-to-pandemic/101253058

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