IntroductionBurnout symptomatology is associated with various negative health consequences; however, the mechanisms underlying these associations remain unclear. One potential pathway involves alterations in the acute stress response. The aims of the present study were to examine burnout-associated alterations in stress-reactivity patterns, during a standardized social stressor compared to a control condition, as well as to examine whether effects associated with greater burnout symptomatology were distinct from other, conceptually overlapping indicators of chronic stress (i.e. depressive symptomatology and elevated hair cortisol concentration [HCC]).Materials and methodsIn a randomized two-factor design a total of 70 employed males with va...
There is mounting evidence that burnout is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Stress-re...
Burnout has been a major topic in occupational health psychology for the past three decades, and wor...
Response rates to first line treatments for affective disorders remain unsatisfactory (Loerinc et al...
Background: Common consequences of long-term psychosocial stress are fatigue and burnout. It has bee...
Burnout symptoms of emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation and reduced personal accomplishment are ...
Identifying individual differences in stress reactivity is of particular interest in the context of ...
AbstractPrior findings indicate that individuals scoring high on vital exhaustion show a dysfunction...
Prior findings indicate that individuals scoring high on vital exhaustion show a dysfunctional stres...
Burnout is a clinical phenomenon characterized by the symptoms of emotional exhaustion, depersonaliz...
We investigated the association between exhaustion and the habituation of free cortisol responses to...
In this research the relationship between hair cortisol and burnout was evaluated through the study ...
Burnout has been suggested to be related to depression. We examined the relationship between burnout...
Burnout is presumed to be the result of chronic stress, and chronic stress is known to affect the HP...
A widely studied construct, burnout is a chronic disease that is considered to develop over time (Ma...
There is mounting evidence that burnout is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Stress-re...
There is mounting evidence that burnout is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Stress-re...
Burnout has been a major topic in occupational health psychology for the past three decades, and wor...
Response rates to first line treatments for affective disorders remain unsatisfactory (Loerinc et al...
Background: Common consequences of long-term psychosocial stress are fatigue and burnout. It has bee...
Burnout symptoms of emotional exhaustion, depersonalisation and reduced personal accomplishment are ...
Identifying individual differences in stress reactivity is of particular interest in the context of ...
AbstractPrior findings indicate that individuals scoring high on vital exhaustion show a dysfunction...
Prior findings indicate that individuals scoring high on vital exhaustion show a dysfunctional stres...
Burnout is a clinical phenomenon characterized by the symptoms of emotional exhaustion, depersonaliz...
We investigated the association between exhaustion and the habituation of free cortisol responses to...
In this research the relationship between hair cortisol and burnout was evaluated through the study ...
Burnout has been suggested to be related to depression. We examined the relationship between burnout...
Burnout is presumed to be the result of chronic stress, and chronic stress is known to affect the HP...
A widely studied construct, burnout is a chronic disease that is considered to develop over time (Ma...
There is mounting evidence that burnout is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Stress-re...
There is mounting evidence that burnout is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Stress-re...
Burnout has been a major topic in occupational health psychology for the past three decades, and wor...
Response rates to first line treatments for affective disorders remain unsatisfactory (Loerinc et al...