Individual Factors that Cause Professional Burnout Syndrome in Social Workers, Employed in Community Rehabilitation Centre for Addictive Diseases

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Date
2022Author
Gudzinskiene, Vida
Pozdniakovas, Andrejus
Sinkuniene, Jautre Ramute
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At the theoretical and empirical levels, the article reveals individual factors that cause professional burnout syndrome in social workers, employed in community rehabilitation centre for addictive diseases. Addiction is
considered a disease that has aspects of biological, psychological, social, and
spiritual nature. Professional burnout syndrome can be understood from different points of view that in total comprise a general concept and consist of the
following aspects: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and decrease in
self-realization. Research object is individual factors that cause professional
burnout syndrome in social workers, employed in community rehabilitation
centres for addictive diseases. The aim of the article is to reveal individual
factors that cause professional burnout syndrome in social workers, employed
in community rehabilitation centre for addictive diseases. Tasks: 1) to provide
theoretical assumptions about individual factors that cause professional burnout
syndrome; 2) based on experiences of social workers to reveal individual factors that cause professional burnout syndrome in social workers, employed in
community rehabilitation centre for addictive diseases. Research methods are
academic literature analysis, document analysis, and qualitative research. In
the study, semi-structured interviews, quality (content) analysis, summarizing
method were used.Empirical research revealed that individual factors that cause
the development of professional burnout syndrome in social workers, employed
in community rehabilitation centres for addictive diseases, are related to: employees’ feelings of inferiority and imposition of excessive requirements on
themselves (timidity, self-devaluation; feeling of guilt; lack of self-evaluation
skills and imposition of excessive requirements on oneself); personal qualities
(too much empathy, attachment to clients or doubts about the meaning of work);
individual factors related to the environment (having nobody to talk to about
problems, inability to change the environment, prolonged stress, narrowing of
interests outside work, and forced abandonment of activities that previously preventively helped to combat professional burnout syndrome). Individual factors
related to clients (collapse of hopes to help the client and excessive responsibility of the social worker for the client’s life). Participants of the research became
“inaccessible” to family members, were unable to distance themselves from
work stress (worries outside work, obsessive thoughts that hinder dissociation
from work, inability to relax, use of free time for work activities); felt a lack of
general and professional competencies.