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Human Services Workers in Crisis. Chapter 16, pages 621-640 Presented by: Darby Wisner. Ask yourself these questions…. Are you starting not to care about work anymore? Is it hard to stay motivated? Do you feel your workplace is a dreaded place to be? Are you snapping at your colleagues?
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Human Services Workers in Crisis Chapter 16, pages 621-640 Presented by: Darby Wisner
Ask yourself these questions… • Are you starting not to care about work anymore? • Is it hard to stay motivated? • Do you feel your workplace is a dreaded place to be? • Are you snapping at your colleagues? • Do you feel disengaged from your work? • Have you lost your passion for things?
What is Burnout? • Psychoanalyst Herbert J. Freudenberger coined the term “burnout” in 1974. • “It is experienced as a state of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion caused by long-term involvement in emotionally demanding situations” (James& Gilliland, 2013, p. 613).
Symptoms of Burnout • Physical depletion • Feelings of helplessness • Feelings of hopelessness • Disillusionment • Negative self-concept • Negative attitudes (toward work, people, and life!)
Burnout continues… • Burnout is lost energy and lost enthusiasm. • “It represents a breaking point beyond which the ability to cope with the environment is severely hampered” (James& Gilliland, 2013, p. 614). • Or better said from Gone with the Wind: “Frankly my dear, I just don’t give a damn!”
How do we cope with Burnout? • Part One: Taking Care of Workers in Crisis • Part Two: Taking Care of Clients in Crisis • Each explains different methods and strategies to cope with burnout!
Taking Care of Workers in Crisis: Culpability of Organizations • A majority of burnouts are from employing agency’s failure to recognize problems • Fundamental for organizations to define job roles and functions • Critical support mechanisms for crisis workers is easy access to consultation and supervision
Taking Care of Workers in Crisis: Self-Recognition of Burnout • Crisis workers provide help to clients but sometimes overlook themselves • Once recognized, the problem may get worse by adjusting the wrong variable
Taking Care of Workers in Crisis: Private Practitioners and Burnout • Generally P.P. have type A personalities • Many start their own P.P. and are overwhelmed with the workload • P.P. is a Business, and P.P’s should be aware of the different aspects of everyday work.
Taking Care of Workers in Crisis: Intervention Strategies • After burnout, service workers may be stubborn and denial-prone clients • Three diminsions of intervention: • 1. Intervention through training • 2. Intervention with the organization • 3. Intervention with the individual
Taking Care of Clients in Crisis: Intervention with the Individual, A Case Study • Worker aims to master environmental stressors via direct action • Worker aims to reduce disturbances when environment can’t be managed via palliative action • Ethical duty of the professional to provide best support possible
Taking Care of Clients in Crisis: Epilogue, Cross-Cultural Comparisons • Causes of burnout are : • 1. Heavy workloads • 2. Unsupportive middle-level managers • 3. Restriction on new ideas and creativity • 4. Inefficiently organized work
Taking Care of Clients in Crisis: Epilogue, Cross-Cultural Comparisons • Savicki’s research shows burnout factors components change with culture: • 1. Individual worker and work setting impact burnout • 2. Overall culture is also a factor that impacts burnout
Source • James, R. K. & Gilliland, B.E. (2013). Crisis Intervention Strategies (7th ed.). United States: Cengage Learning. • Chapter 16, pages 621-640.