Burnout Among Service Providers for People Living with HIV: Factors Related to Coping and Resilience.
Rachelle ReidAarti MadhuStephanie GonzalezHannah CrosbyMichelle StjusteSannisha K DalePublished in: Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities (2023)
Individuals who provide services for people living with HIV (PLWH) face numerous work-related challenges, including psychosocial and structural factors affecting the quality of care that they provide. Little is known about the factors that relate to burnout among service providers for PLWH. The current study seeks to examine the factors associated with burnout and the role of resilience and coping in the context of burnout. Via convenience sampling, data was collected from 28 professionals (e.g., peer counselors, HIV testers, case managers/case workers, group facilitators, or social workers) serving PLWH in the USA. Participants completed quantitative measures on sociodemographics, organizational factors, discrimination, trauma, depression, and burnout. A sub-sample of 19 participants provided in-depth qualitative data via semi-structured interviews on burnout, coping, and resilience as a buffer against the effects of burnout. Thematic content analysis revealed themes on the factors related to burnout (e.g., discrimination, limited financial and housing resources, and COVID-19), rejuvenating factors, coping with burnout, and intervention strategies. Additionally, Pearson's product moment correlations revealed significant associations between mental health variables such as depressive and posttraumatic stress disorder symptomology with (a) discrimination and microaggressions and (b) burnout. The current study highlights challenges to providing HIV care, including structural barriers and discrimination that are doubly impactful to the professionals in this sample who share identities with the PLWH whom they serve. These findings may inform the development of an intervention targeting burnout among individuals providing services to PLWH and motivate change to remove structural barriers and improve quality of care for PLWH.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- social support
- depressive symptoms
- randomized controlled trial
- primary care
- posttraumatic stress disorder
- palliative care
- climate change
- quality improvement
- sars cov
- electronic health record
- pain management
- hepatitis c virus
- hiv positive
- young adults
- chronic pain
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- big data
- south africa
- stress induced
- high resolution
- health insurance
- optical coherence tomography
- drug induced