Individual strategies play a crucial but complementary role in preventing burnout in the non-profit sector. This article explores how staff and volunteers can sustain wellbeing through self-care, boundary setting, peer support, resilience training, and digital wellbeing tools. It highlights the importance of negotiating realistic responsibilities, developing assertiveness, and reframing rest as a professional necessity rather than a personal indulgence. Peer networks and mentoring foster community, while resilience training strengthens adaptive capacity and recovery from stress. Access to counselling, teletherapy, and debriefing enhances coping mechanisms, particularly in high-stress humanitarian contexts. Digital tools extend accessibility but must operate within supportive organisational cultures. The article concludes that individual strategies achieve lasting impact only when validated and resourced institutionally—embedding personal agency within systems of collective care and accountability.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.
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