1.Prevalence of burnout among healthcare professionals in Singapore.
Kok Hian TAN ; Boon Leng LIM ; Zann FOO ; Joo Ying TANG ; Mabel SIM ; Phong Teck LEE ; Kok Yong FONG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2022;51(7):409-416
INTRODUCTION:
The aim was to study the prevalence of burnout among various groups of healthcare professionals in Singapore.
METHODS:
An anonymous online survey questionnaire was conducted using the Maslach Burnout Inventory - Human Services to measure three categories of burnout: emotional exhaustion (EE), depersonalisation (DP) and personal accomplishment (PA) from July 2019 to January 2020 in a healthcare cluster in Singapore.
RESULTS:
The survey was completed by 6,048 healthcare professionals out of a target survey population of 15,000 (response rate 40.3%). The study revealed 37.8% of respondents had high EE score ≥27, 29.7% of respondents had high DP score ≥10, and 55.3% of respondents had low PA score ≤33. Respondents with either high EE score or high DP score constituted 43.9% (n=2,654). The Allied Health group had the highest mean EE score, which was significantly higher than those of Medical, Nursing and Non-clinical groups (P<0.05). The Medical group had the highest mean DP score and this was significantly higher than the Nursing, Allied Health and Non-clinical groups (P<0.05). The Non-clinical group had the lowest PA, which was significantly lower than the Medical, Nursing and Allied Health groups (P<0.005).
CONCLUSION
There was high prevalence of burnout among healthcare professionals in Singapore, especially the allied health professionals. There were significant differences in the 3 categories of burnout (EE, DP and PA) among the different groups of healthcare professionals. There is an urgent need to address the high burnout rate.
Burnout, Professional/psychology*
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Delivery of Health Care
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Health Personnel/psychology*
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Humans
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Prevalence
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Singapore/epidemiology*
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Surveys and Questionnaires
2.Long-Term Trends in Ischemic Stroke Incidence and Risk Factors: Perspectives from an Asian Stroke Registry
Benjamin Y.Q. TAN ; Joshua T.C. TAN ; Dawn CHEAH ; Huili ZHENG ; Pin Pin PEK ; Deidre A. DE SILVA ; Aftab AHMAD ; Bernard P.L. CHAN ; Hui Meng CHANG ; Keng He KONG ; Sherry H. YOUNG ; Kok Foo TANG ; Tian Ming TU ; Leonard Leong-Litt YEO ; Narayanaswamy VENKETASUBRAMANIAN ; Andrew F.W. HO ; Marcus Eng Hock ONG
Journal of Stroke 2020;22(3):396-399