The “burnout syndrome” has been defined as a combination of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment caused by chronic occupational stress. Although there has been increasing medical interest in burnout over the last decades, it is argued in this paper that the syndrome cannot be elevated to the status of diagnostic category, based on (1) an analysis of the genesis of the burnout construct, (2) a review of the latest literature on burnout-depression overlap, (3) a questioning of the three-dimensional structure of the burnout syndrome, and (4) a critical examination of the notion that burnout is singularized by its job-related character. It turns out that the burnout construct is built on a fragile foundat...
Whether burnout and depression cover the same psychopathology remains to be elucidated. To date, sub...
Whether burnout is a form of depression or a distinct phenomenon is an object of controversy. The ai...
Although we share with Eckleberry-Hunt et al. (2018) some of their criticisms regarding the problema...
The “burnout syndrome” has been defined as a combination of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization,...
The burnout syndrome has been defined as a combination of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization,...
Key theoretical arguments and empirical findings converge to suggest that the burnout construct capt...
Burnout has been defined as a job-induced syndrome combining emotional exhaustion, depersonalization...
Reducing depression to its clinical stage—to a nosological category—is unwarranted when examining th...
All in all, Imo’s review is undermined by the very research it relies on. We recommend that research...
In this chapter, we proposed an overview of burnout, from the introduction of the construct in the m...
A redefinition of burnout as a depressive condition is called for so that the harmful effects of unr...
Burnout is a popular indicator of job-related distress, notably in research on the ill-being of medi...
In view of the profound problems attached to the construct of burnout, we recommended in our that oc...
In view of the profound problems attached to the construct of burnout, we recommended that occupatio...
There is no consensus on whether burnout constitutes a depressive condition or an original entity re...
Whether burnout and depression cover the same psychopathology remains to be elucidated. To date, sub...
Whether burnout is a form of depression or a distinct phenomenon is an object of controversy. The ai...
Although we share with Eckleberry-Hunt et al. (2018) some of their criticisms regarding the problema...
The “burnout syndrome” has been defined as a combination of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization,...
The burnout syndrome has been defined as a combination of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization,...
Key theoretical arguments and empirical findings converge to suggest that the burnout construct capt...
Burnout has been defined as a job-induced syndrome combining emotional exhaustion, depersonalization...
Reducing depression to its clinical stage—to a nosological category—is unwarranted when examining th...
All in all, Imo’s review is undermined by the very research it relies on. We recommend that research...
In this chapter, we proposed an overview of burnout, from the introduction of the construct in the m...
A redefinition of burnout as a depressive condition is called for so that the harmful effects of unr...
Burnout is a popular indicator of job-related distress, notably in research on the ill-being of medi...
In view of the profound problems attached to the construct of burnout, we recommended in our that oc...
In view of the profound problems attached to the construct of burnout, we recommended that occupatio...
There is no consensus on whether burnout constitutes a depressive condition or an original entity re...
Whether burnout and depression cover the same psychopathology remains to be elucidated. To date, sub...
Whether burnout is a form of depression or a distinct phenomenon is an object of controversy. The ai...
Although we share with Eckleberry-Hunt et al. (2018) some of their criticisms regarding the problema...