Prevalence and Associated Factors of Burnout Risk among Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 Pandemic
Dublin Core
Title
Prevalence and Associated Factors of Burnout Risk among Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 Pandemic
Subject
ED nurse, burnout,
COVID-19,
associated factor
COVID-19,
associated factor
Description
Introduction: The Emergency Department (ED) nurses are the first health
care professionals to treat patients infected during COVID-19 pandemic.
The workload of ED nurses is quite heavy because generally patients who
are rushed to the ED are emergency patients who need to get health
services as quickly and accurately as possible. This study aimed to
determine the prevalence and associated factors of burnout risk among
Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 pandemic in Bali.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was carried out on the risk of burnout
among emergency nurses in Bali. This research was conducted in June
2021 involving 85 emergency nurses who are members of the Indonesian
emergency and disaster nurse association in Bali. The instrument used to
identify the nurses’ burnout is the Maslach Burnout Inventory Indonesian
version. Statistical analysis was carried out using the Spearman Rank test
with a level of significance (α<0.05).
Results: The ED nurses burnouts during the COVID-19 pandemic in Bali
have average burnout ranged from 9.8 to 34.58. Most of the respondents
(72.9%) were in mild emotional exhaustion, 69.4% experienced moderate
depersonalization and 45.9% had low personal accomplishment. Hospital
resource have co-morbidities and previous experience of treating patients
with infectious diseases statistically correlated with ED nurses burnouts.
Conclusion: Hospital resources, having co-morbidities and experience in
caring for communicable diseases statistically are associated factors of
burnout risk among Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 pandemic.
care professionals to treat patients infected during COVID-19 pandemic.
The workload of ED nurses is quite heavy because generally patients who
are rushed to the ED are emergency patients who need to get health
services as quickly and accurately as possible. This study aimed to
determine the prevalence and associated factors of burnout risk among
Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 pandemic in Bali.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was carried out on the risk of burnout
among emergency nurses in Bali. This research was conducted in June
2021 involving 85 emergency nurses who are members of the Indonesian
emergency and disaster nurse association in Bali. The instrument used to
identify the nurses’ burnout is the Maslach Burnout Inventory Indonesian
version. Statistical analysis was carried out using the Spearman Rank test
with a level of significance (α<0.05).
Results: The ED nurses burnouts during the COVID-19 pandemic in Bali
have average burnout ranged from 9.8 to 34.58. Most of the respondents
(72.9%) were in mild emotional exhaustion, 69.4% experienced moderate
depersonalization and 45.9% had low personal accomplishment. Hospital
resource have co-morbidities and previous experience of treating patients
with infectious diseases statistically correlated with ED nurses burnouts.
Conclusion: Hospital resources, having co-morbidities and experience in
caring for communicable diseases statistically are associated factors of
burnout risk among Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 pandemic.
Creator
I Made Dwie Pradnya Susila1* & Ida Ayu Agung Laksmi1
Source
https://doi.org/10.37363/bnr.2022.3169
Date
29 March 2022
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Collection
Citation
I Made Dwie Pradnya Susila1* & Ida Ayu Agung Laksmi1, “Prevalence and Associated Factors of Burnout Risk among Emergency Nurses during COVID-19 Pandemic,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 21, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11351.