Original Article


Burnout syndrome and job satisfaction in Greek residents: exploring differences between trainees inside and outside the country

Ilias I. Salpigktidis, Dimitrios Paliouras, Apostolos S. Gogakos, Thomas Rallis, Nikolaos C. Schizas, Fotios Chatzinikolaou, Dimitrios Niakas, Pavlos Sarafis, Panagiotis Bamidis, Achilleas Lazopoulos, Sophia Triadafyllidou, Paul Zarogoulidis, Nikolaos Barbetakis

Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study is to investigate the levels of burnout among Greek residents, highlighting potential differences between those practicing at home and abroad, as well as to investigate correlations with demographic, individual and labor factors.
Methods: The research was conducted on a sample of 131 residents, using an anonymous questionnaire which included demographic, individual and labor characteristics, Maslach’s Burnout Inventory, questions regarding job and life satisfaction levels, working conditions and the impacts of the economic recession.
Results: Fifty two point seven percent of the sample were training in the Greek National Health Service (N.H.S.), 27.5% in Germany and 19.8% in the United Kingdom. One out of three residents in the Greek system showed high levels of burnout in all three dimensions of the syndrome, while 51.1%, 72.2% and 30.8% of the Greek, British and German team, respectively, appeared burnt out simultaneously in two dimensions. Levels of job and life satisfactions ranged on average, while workload appeared heavy.
Conclusions: The occurrence of burnout was associated with gender, specialty, employment characteristics (working hours, autonomy, support etc.), proneness to accidents, country, job satisfaction and quality of life, but was not associated with age or marital status. No correlation was found with susceptibility to medical errors.

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