2017
DOI: 10.1111/jan.13251
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Burnout mediates the association between depression and patient safety perceptions: a cross‐sectional study in hospital nurses

Abstract: Aims The aim of this study was to investigate the relationships between depressive symptoms, burnout and perceptions of patient safety. A mediation model was proposed whereby the association between symptoms of depression and patient safety perceptions was mediated by burnout. Background There is growing interest in the relationships between depressive symptoms and burnout in healthcare staff and the safety of patient care. Depressive symptoms are higher in healthcare staff than the general population and over… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(108 reference statements)
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“…To take just a few examples, in Mosing, Butkovic, and Ullén () study, the disattenuated correlation between exhaustion and depression was 0.70. The disattenuated correlation between emotional exhaustion and depression was 0.75 in the studies by Brenninkmeyer et al (), Halpern, Maunder, Schwartz, and Gurevich (), and Kroska, Calarge, O'Hara, Deumic, and Dindo (), 0.79 in Johnson et al's () study, and 0.82 in Schmidt and Diestel's () study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…To take just a few examples, in Mosing, Butkovic, and Ullén () study, the disattenuated correlation between exhaustion and depression was 0.70. The disattenuated correlation between emotional exhaustion and depression was 0.75 in the studies by Brenninkmeyer et al (), Halpern, Maunder, Schwartz, and Gurevich (), and Kroska, Calarge, O'Hara, Deumic, and Dindo (), 0.79 in Johnson et al's () study, and 0.82 in Schmidt and Diestel's () study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…; Johnson et al . 2017a). However, the direction of this relationship is unclear and the two factors may operate as a feedback loop: higher staff well‐being may lead to better quality and safety of care, but an inability to provide high quality, safe care may lead to disillusionment, stress, and burnout (West et al .…”
Section: Relevance For Clinical Practicementioning
confidence: 97%
“…The healthcare environment can have a negative impact on workers, due to factors such as shift working, stress, the burdens of care, peer relationships and performance targets, together with high levels of emotional demand that may cause anxiety, frustration, stress, depression and burnout (Johnson et al, ; Lee, Chiang, & Kuo, ; Maslach, Schaufeli, & Leiter, ; Salvarani et al, ). This situation can provoke major problems for healthcare personnel in general and for nurses in particular (Cañadas‐De la Fuente et al, ), who often present high levels of burnout (Akman, Ozturk, Bektas, Ayar, & Armstrong, ; Gómez‐Urquiza et al, ; Molina‐Praena et al, ; Monsalve‐Reyes et al, ; Pradas‐Hernández et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%