Burnout in the non-profit sector generates consequences that reach far beyond individual exhaustion. This article examines the cascading effects of burnout at individual, organisational, community, and systemic levels. At the individual level, burnout undermines health, erodes motivation, and accelerates withdrawal from mission-driven work. At the organisational level, it causes high turnover, weakens decision-making, and damages morale and credibility. Communities experience service disruption and declining trust, particularly where NGOs act as essential service providers. At the systemic level, burnout destabilises donor confidence and partnership reliability, weakening collective impact across the sector. The article positions burnout not merely as a personal health issue but as a governance and sustainability risk, calling for integrated prevention strategies that embed wellbeing into leadership, funding structures, and accountability frameworks.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.