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Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China

BACKGROUND: Prehospital delay is associated with non-modifiable factors such as age, residential region, and disease severity. However, the impact of psychosocial factors especially for job burnout on prehospital decision delay is still little understood. METHOD: This internet-based survey was condu...

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Autores principales: Yin, Han, Jiang, Cheng, Shi, Xiaohe, Chen, Yilin, Yu, Xueju, Wang, Yu, Li, Weiya, Ma, Huan, Geng, Qingshan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9045849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35496161
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.762406
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author Yin, Han
Jiang, Cheng
Shi, Xiaohe
Chen, Yilin
Yu, Xueju
Wang, Yu
Li, Weiya
Ma, Huan
Geng, Qingshan
author_facet Yin, Han
Jiang, Cheng
Shi, Xiaohe
Chen, Yilin
Yu, Xueju
Wang, Yu
Li, Weiya
Ma, Huan
Geng, Qingshan
author_sort Yin, Han
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prehospital delay is associated with non-modifiable factors such as age, residential region, and disease severity. However, the impact of psychosocial factors especially for job burnout on prehospital decision delay is still little understood. METHOD: This internet-based survey was conducted between 14 February 2021 and 5 March 2021 in China through the Wechat platform and web page. Self-designed questionnaires about the expected and actual length of prehospital decision time and the Chinese version of Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey, Type D Personality Scale-14, and Social Support Rating Scale were applied. A total of 1,039 general participants with a history of perceptible but tolerable body discomfort were included. RESULTS: The top six reasons for prehospital decision delay were: (1) endure until self-healing (50.7%), (2) too busy to ask for leave (40.3%), (3) process for seeing a doctor too complicated (35.8%), (4) too tired after work (26.2%), (5) worry about the expenditure (16.6%), and (6) fear of being identified as with serious problem (14.5%). The univariate analyses revealed that older age (p = 0.001), type D personality (p = 0.025), job burnout (p = 0.055), and worrying about expenditure (p = 0.004) were associated with prolonged prehospital decision time, while engaged in medical-related job (p = 0.028) and with more social support (p = 0.066) would shorten the delay. The multivariate analysis using logistic regression model with forward selecting method showed that age [per 10 years, odds ratio (OR) 1.19 (1.09–1.31), p < 0.001], job burnout [per 10 points in Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey (MBI-GS), OR 1.17 (1.04–1.31), p = 0.007], and worrying about expenditure [OR 1.75 (1.25–2.47), p = 0.001] were the three determinants for prehospital decision delay (>7 days). Mediating effects were analyzed by using bias-corrected percentile bootstrap methods (N = 10,000). Social support was found partially mediated the relationship between the determinants and prehospital decision time. The partial mediating effect of social support accounted for 24.0% of the total effect for job burnout and 11.6% for worrying about expenditure. CONCLUSION: Psychosocial factors have a non-negligible impact on prehospital decision delay. The crucial part of prehospital decision delay may be the lack of motivation inside. Job burnout and lack of social support, as two commonly seen features in the modern world, should be given enough consideration in disease prevention and treatment.
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spelling pubmed-90458492022-04-28 Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China Yin, Han Jiang, Cheng Shi, Xiaohe Chen, Yilin Yu, Xueju Wang, Yu Li, Weiya Ma, Huan Geng, Qingshan Front Psychol Psychology BACKGROUND: Prehospital delay is associated with non-modifiable factors such as age, residential region, and disease severity. However, the impact of psychosocial factors especially for job burnout on prehospital decision delay is still little understood. METHOD: This internet-based survey was conducted between 14 February 2021 and 5 March 2021 in China through the Wechat platform and web page. Self-designed questionnaires about the expected and actual length of prehospital decision time and the Chinese version of Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey, Type D Personality Scale-14, and Social Support Rating Scale were applied. A total of 1,039 general participants with a history of perceptible but tolerable body discomfort were included. RESULTS: The top six reasons for prehospital decision delay were: (1) endure until self-healing (50.7%), (2) too busy to ask for leave (40.3%), (3) process for seeing a doctor too complicated (35.8%), (4) too tired after work (26.2%), (5) worry about the expenditure (16.6%), and (6) fear of being identified as with serious problem (14.5%). The univariate analyses revealed that older age (p = 0.001), type D personality (p = 0.025), job burnout (p = 0.055), and worrying about expenditure (p = 0.004) were associated with prolonged prehospital decision time, while engaged in medical-related job (p = 0.028) and with more social support (p = 0.066) would shorten the delay. The multivariate analysis using logistic regression model with forward selecting method showed that age [per 10 years, odds ratio (OR) 1.19 (1.09–1.31), p < 0.001], job burnout [per 10 points in Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey (MBI-GS), OR 1.17 (1.04–1.31), p = 0.007], and worrying about expenditure [OR 1.75 (1.25–2.47), p = 0.001] were the three determinants for prehospital decision delay (>7 days). Mediating effects were analyzed by using bias-corrected percentile bootstrap methods (N = 10,000). Social support was found partially mediated the relationship between the determinants and prehospital decision time. The partial mediating effect of social support accounted for 24.0% of the total effect for job burnout and 11.6% for worrying about expenditure. CONCLUSION: Psychosocial factors have a non-negligible impact on prehospital decision delay. The crucial part of prehospital decision delay may be the lack of motivation inside. Job burnout and lack of social support, as two commonly seen features in the modern world, should be given enough consideration in disease prevention and treatment. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9045849/ /pubmed/35496161 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.762406 Text en Copyright © 2022 Yin, Jiang, Shi, Chen, Yu, Wang, Li, Ma and Geng. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Yin, Han
Jiang, Cheng
Shi, Xiaohe
Chen, Yilin
Yu, Xueju
Wang, Yu
Li, Weiya
Ma, Huan
Geng, Qingshan
Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title_full Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title_fullStr Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title_full_unstemmed Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title_short Job Burnout Is Associated With Prehospital Decision Delay: An Internet-Based Survey in China
title_sort job burnout is associated with prehospital decision delay: an internet-based survey in china
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9045849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35496161
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.762406
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