This article presents comparative case studies of burnout prevention strategies across diverse non-profit contexts, including humanitarian, community-based, faith-based, and digital organisations. Each demonstrates how recognition, peer support, and systemic care can sustain engagement even under chronic stress. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) exemplifies trauma-informed organisational frameworks, integrating counselling and debriefing into field operations. Community-based NGOs in Latin America demonstrate peer-led volunteer groups as effective low-cost support systems. Faith-based organisations balance spiritual devotion with structured policies for rest and sabbaticals, while digital volunteer networks, particularly post-pandemic, manage “virtual burnout” through task rotation and virtual peer groups. Together, these cases affirm that burnout prevention is achievable across resource conditions when guided by shared principles of recognition, organisational responsibility, and holistic care.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.