The significant upside of reducing and preventing burnout
This article was originally written by Erin Eatough, Ph.D., and published on the?BetterUp blog. Interested in more articles like this??Sign up for our newsletter.
Both in and out of the workplace,?burnout is reaching epidemic levels.?
The vast majority of workers in the US (89%)?report experiencing burnout?over the past year, and it’s adversely affecting their physical and mental health. Work-related stress — even before the pandemic —?was responsible for?120,000 deaths and nearly $190 billion in spending?each year in the US. And it’s fueling an overall uptick in?anxiety, depression, and substance abuse.
While?much of the conversation around burnout has centered around how to prevent, manage, or minimize it, there’s been little focus on the positive impact that comes from actually reducing it. We’re only scratching the surface when it comes to understanding how mitigating the effects of burnout affects our overall well-being and shapes our outlook on life.
We were curious if reducing burnout led to any significant improvement in other areas of our mental and emotional health. Analyzing data from nearly 10,000 BetterUp members, we uncovered clear and powerful connections between burnout, hope, and optimism.
What the data say
Controlling for management position (i.e. making sure underrepresented groups [URGs] and nonURGs were equally represented across management roles) we found:
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Why this matters
The workplace is a prime breeding ground for?emotional contagion?— the spread of attitudes, emotions, and behaviors to others. In other words, we tend to adopt the feelings of the people we are around most.?
Unsurprisingly, mitigating burnout leads to lower levels of stress, anxiety, and depression. But more impressively, reducing burnout increases positive feelings like optimism and hope. When teams are made up of individuals with positive mindsets, they are more innovative, more creative, and enjoy?increased performance?while experiencing less attrition, absenteeism, and conflict.?
Taken together with the finding from one survey that?70% of employees would leave their organization for a different employer offering resources to reduce burnout, companies have a lot to gain from taking proactive steps to reduce burnout.
Countering burnout in your organization has real and lasting impact on your employees’ wellbeing and mental outlook which in turn benefits your entire organization. While there are several different resources that can help your workforce deal with burnout, the challenge lies in the fact that everyone experiences stress in their own unique way. The contributing factors to burnout vary as well, including factors related to?individual work habits, poor management practices, and culture?according to Dr. Jacinta Jiminéz, author of The Burnout Fix. The most flexible solution is personalized coaching.?
Professional coaches have been proven to help individuals avoid burnout by helping them?regulate their emotions,?build resilience, improve communication, and achieve better work life balance. When coaching is individualized and ongoing, employees get the support they need, when they need it, to successfully work through even the most challenging situations. In addition, managers who receive personalized coaching improve their leadership skills and create work environments where their teams feel more recognized, empowered, and valued and experience more inclusion and belonging. On average, BetterUp members have reported a?19% reduction in burnout.?
While it’s true that stress and anxiety are unavoidable at times, burnout doesn’t have to be.?Recovery is possible, but prevention is preferable. An investment in professional coaching can provide your employees with the support and tools they need to successfully adapt to challenges, create environments where people can perform at their best, counter burnout before it strikes, and minimize its effects when it happens.
Founder & Digital Health Solutions Consultant @ TeleDocs Consulting | Digital Health Solutions Consultant
2 年Professional coaching will help employees to create habits using evidence-based coaching techniques to avoid burnout. Having continuous cycles of unhelpful thought patterns long term, without the evidence-based techniques to shift into the unstressed state, can lead to burnout. Employees can learn to create the habits using the techniques which reduce stress, if they are given the opportunity to work with a professional coach to help them to do this. The best way to avoid burnout in the workplace is by using a preventative approach.