A survey of anaesthetic technicians in New Zealand revealed high to moderate emotional exhaustion in 48%, depersonalisation in 39%, and low personal accomplishment in 58% of respondents.
Cross-Sectional (n=154)
Blinded
Yes
What are the levels of job satisfaction, stress, and burnout among anaesthetic technicians in New Zealand?
Anaesthetic technicians in New Zealand experience significant levels of burnout, physical impairment, and emotional impairment, highlighting the need for structural evaluation and management.
Anaesthetic technicians play a key role in the operating room, yet little is known about their levels of job satisfaction or workplace stress. A blinded, confidential single mail-out survey was posted to anaesthetic technicians in New Zealand. The survey consisted of demographic information, a job satisfaction survey, the Maslach Burnout Inventory and the Short Form 12. At total of 154 forms were returned (51% response rate). Respondents worked predominantly in public hospitals and many had duties outside the operating room. Job satisfaction was related to teamwork, practical nature of work and patient contact, while dissatisfaction was related to lack of respect from nurses and limited career pathway. High to moderate levels of emotional exhaustion (48%), depersonalisation (39%) and low levels of personal accomplishment (58%) were indicators of burnout. The Short Form 12 revealed high levels of physical impairment in 24% and emotional impairment in 35% of respondents. These data suggest that work is needed to evaluate anaesthetic assistants' job structure and actively manage their important physical and emotional sequelae.
Kluger et al. (Sat,) conducted a cross-sectional in Occupational stress and burnout (n=154). Working as an anaesthetic technician was evaluated on Burnout indicators (emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation, personal accomplishment). A survey of anaesthetic technicians in New Zealand revealed high to moderate emotional exhaustion in 48%, depersonalisation in 39%, and low personal accomplishment in 58% of respondents.
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