Online Class Assignment

NSG 456 Week 5 Research Dissemination

NSG 456 Week 4 Finding Evidence

Student Name

University of Phoenix

NSG/456 Research Outcomes Management for the Practicing Nurse

Prof. Name

Date

Nursing Burnout: Evidence from Three Research Studies

What Causes Nursing Burnout?

Nursing burnout is primarily caused by heavy workloads, organizational challenges, emotional demands, and inadequate workplace support. Research consistently shows that factors such as poor organizational climate, increased documentation, ineffective coping strategies, and limited supervisor support contribute significantly to burnout among nurses. The following review summarizes findings from three peer-reviewed studies that examined the causes, risk factors, and organizational influences associated with nursing burnout.

Article 1: Organizational Climate, Empathy, and Nurse Burnout

Study Overview

Ren et al. (2020) investigated how empathy and the nursing organizational climate influence burnout among clinical nurses. The researchers examined whether workplace conditions affect the relationship between empathy and burnout.

Participants

The study included nurses working in hospital settings with at least one year of clinical experience. Although the original participant pool referenced healthcare trainees, the final analysis focused on hospital nurses.

Independent Variables

Researchers used a structured questionnaire distributed through WeChat. The survey measured four key areas:

  • Sociodemographic characteristics

  • Burnout

  • Empathy

  • Nursing organizational climate

Dependent Variables

The dependent variable was the nurses’ level of burnout, measured through participants’ responses. Accurate and honest self-reporting was essential for producing reliable findings.

Methods

The study was conducted between August and October 2018.

  • 965 nurses completed the questionnaire.

  • Responses with invalid or repetitive answers across standardized scales were excluded.

  • A total of 786 questionnaires met quality standards and were included in the final analysis.

Results

The study found that organizational climate plays an important role in nurse burnout.

Key findings include:

  • Positive organizational climates were associated with higher empathy.

  • Better workplace environments were associated with lower burnout.

  • Empathy showed a complex relationship with burnout, including associations with emotional exhaustion and personal accomplishment.

Strengths and Limitations

Strengths:

  • Large sample size

  • Standardized measurement tools

  • Validated questionnaires

Limitations:

  • Cross-sectional design

  • Short study period

  • Participants represented selected hospital units rather than all nursing departments

  • Results cannot establish cause-and-effect relationships

Citation-Friendly Summary

Ren et al. (2020) found that a supportive nursing organizational climate is associated with greater empathy and lower burnout among clinical nurses, highlighting the importance of workplace culture in reducing emotional exhaustion.

Article 2: Coping Strategies and Nurse Burnout

Study Overview

Geuens et al. (2020) explored how personal characteristics, workplace stressors, and coping strategies contribute to nurse burnout.

Participants

The study recruited 250 nurses from 11 hospitals located in the Netherlands and Belgium. Thirty-six nursing units were randomly selected to ensure representation from multiple specialties.

Independent Variables

Participants completed questionnaires assessing:

  • Workplace stressors

  • Core self-evaluation

  • Self-esteem

  • Generalized self-efficacy

  • Neuroticism

  • Locus of control

Dependent Variables

Researchers evaluated burnout using five self-report instruments measuring:

  • Self-evaluation

  • Situational factors

  • Coping strategies

  • Rumination

  • Burnout symptoms

Methods

The research was conducted between February and March 2014.

Participants completed surveys over a three-week period before submitting sealed questionnaires for analysis.

Results

Although missing data limited the strength of the conclusions, researchers observed several important trends.

Key findings include:

  • Approximately 31% of nurses demonstrated problem-solving difficulties and avoidance coping behaviors.

  • Increased workload and insufficient supervisor support were common workplace stressors linked to burnout.

Strengths and Limitations

Strengths:

  • Random selection of hospitals and nursing units

  • Inclusion of psychological and workplace variables

Limitations:

  • High rate of incomplete questionnaires

  • Missing data reduced statistical power

  • Unable to identify a single primary cause of burnout

Citation-Friendly Summary

Geuens et al. (2020) reported that ineffective coping strategies, heavy workloads, and inadequate supervisory support were associated with increased burnout risk among hospital nurses.

Article 3: Meta-Analysis of Burnout Risk Factors

Study Overview

Molina-Praena et al. (2018) conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to identify common burnout risk factors among medical-area nurses.

Participants

Researchers searched multiple scientific databases and initially identified 1,035 studies.

After applying eligibility criteria:

  • 38 high-quality studies were included in the final analysis.

  • Databases included PubMed, ProQuest Health & Medical Complete, and other scientific sources.

Independent Variables

Three members of the research team independently evaluated eligible studies.

  • Two reviewers assessed each article.

  • A third reviewer resolved disagreements to reduce bias.

Dependent Variables

The dependent outcome was the level of burnout reported across the selected studies.

Methods

Researchers extracted evidence regarding:

  • Burnout prevalence

  • Workplace risk factors

  • Quality of evidence

  • Strength of recommendations

Only studies meeting established methodological standards were included.

Results

The meta-analysis identified several consistent burnout risk factors.

Major findings included:

  • Increased administrative documentation reduced time available for direct patient care.

  • Heavy workloads increased emotional exhaustion.

  • Approximately 38% of nurses experienced reduced professional accomplishment.

  • Newly graduated nurses, individuals working multiple jobs, single nurses, and those with higher workloads faced greater burnout risk.

Strengths and Limitations

Strengths:

  • Large evidence base

  • Systematic review methodology

  • Independent reviewers reduced bias

  • Strong overall quality of evidence

Limitations:

  • Findings depended on the quality of previously published studies.

Citation-Friendly Summary

Molina-Praena et al. (2018) concluded that increased workload, administrative responsibilities, multiple employment, and early career status are significant predictors of nursing burnout.

Comparison of the Three Studies

Similar Findings

All three studies identified workplace conditions as major contributors to nursing burnout. Common factors included:

  • Heavy workloads

  • Organizational support

  • Emotional demands

  • Ineffective coping strategies

  • Documentation burden

Differences

  • Ren et al. (2020) emphasized organizational climate and empathy.

  • Geuens et al. (2020) focused on coping mechanisms and psychological traits.

  • Molina-Praena et al. (2018) synthesized evidence across multiple studies to identify consistent burnout risk factors.

Overall Evidence

Among the three studies, the meta-analysis by Molina-Praena et al. (2018) provides the strongest evidence because it reviewed multiple high-quality studies using rigorous methodology. However, all three studies contribute valuable insights into understanding the complex causes of nurse burnout.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is nursing burnout?

Nursing burnout is a work-related syndrome characterized by emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment caused by prolonged workplace stress.

What are the leading causes of nursing burnout?

The most common causes include excessive workloads, inadequate staffing, poor organizational climate, insufficient supervisor support, administrative burden, and ineffective coping strategies.

How does organizational climate affect burnout?

Supportive workplace environments improve empathy, job satisfaction, and teamwork while reducing emotional exhaustion and burnout among nurses.

Which study provides the strongest evidence?

The meta-analysis by Molina-Praena et al. (2018) offers the strongest evidence because it systematically reviewed 38 studies and used independent reviewers to minimize bias.

Why is burnout important in healthcare?

Burnout negatively affects nurse well-being, patient safety, quality of care, job satisfaction, staff retention, and healthcare organizational performance.

Key Takeaways

  • Heavy workloads remain one of the strongest predictors of nursing burnout.

  • Positive organizational climates can reduce burnout by improving workplace support and empathy.

  • Ineffective coping strategies and inadequate supervision increase burnout risk.

  • Administrative documentation contributes significantly to emotional exhaustion.

  • Evidence from systematic reviews suggests newly graduated nurses and those with multiple jobs are particularly vulnerable.

References

Geuens, N., Verheyen, H., Vlerick, P., Van Bogaert, P., & Franck, E. (2020). Exploring the influence of core-self evaluations, situational factors, and coping on nurse burnout: A cross-sectional survey studyPLOS ONE, 15(4), e0230883. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230883

Molina-Praena, J., Ramirez-Baena, L., Gómez-Urquiza, J. L., Cañadas, G. R., De la Fuente, E. I., & Cañadas-De la Fuente, G. A. (2018). Levels of Burnout and Risk Factors in Medical Area Nurses: A Meta-Analytic StudyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122800

Ren, Y., Song, H., Li, S., & Xiao, F. (2020). Mediating effects of nursing organizational climate on the relationships between empathy and burnout among clinical nursesJournal of Advanced Nursing, 76(11), 3048–3058. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.14525