Abstract:
Job burnout is a burning concept nowadays that has been incorporated into everyone‘s lives
remarkably. Chronic job stresses have caused many professionals and workers to fall into job
burnout in the past few decades. In wide-range, job burnout is an extensive reaction of persistent
emotional and interpersonal stressors on the job. The purposes of this study were to assess the
need for a burnout management program in hospital settings, to develop an intervention program
namely ―Communication Skills and Selfcare Enhancement Program‖ for burnout manage ment,
and to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention program by quantitative and qualitative
assessment. With this vision, three studies were carried out in the present M.Phil project. The
first study was an FGD to assess the need for a burnout management program. The FGD found a
valid need for a burnout management program and identified many sources of burnout, which
include lack of good communication skills, un-empathic and un-appreciating environment and
lack of knowledge on selfcare. The second study was to develop an intervention program namely
―Communication Skills and Selfcare Enhancement Program‖. It was developed based on FGD
findings and the reference of conventional burnout management programs. The intervention
program consists of four phases - 1) stress management, 2) communication skills, 3) empathetic
communication and behavior and 4) stroking (recognition). Four separate modules have been
developed for each workshop from beginning to end with an appropriate time duration that
includes brief content. After completion of the module, a pilot execution was conducted before
the field study and according to the feedback and suggestions of the pilot test, small changes
were made. Thus, the modules were finalized for the field test. The third study was to evaluate
the effectiveness of the intervention program by quantitative and qualitative assessment. The
intervention was administered once a week for an hour in four consecutive weeks. It was
conducted on two groups (experimental and control) following pretest post test design. A total number of 63 employees were included from two hospitals of Dhaka city where 30 of them
received the intervention program and 33 of them did not receive any intervention. The result
implied that the intervention significantly reduced the level of burnout. The burnout level
dropped from the pretest to the post test phase in the experimental condition and a little hike at
the follow-up phase, but not in the control condition. The qualitative assessment which was done
by the in-depth interview at the second follow-up of the program further supported the findings.
Altogether the outcomes of the present study revealed that the organizations can use this type of
program under the guidance of professional psychologists to manage their employee burnout, as
they are responsible to look after and maintain the mental health of their employees. This study
is a baseline that has opened the further scope of different studies in this field. It has been
expected to contribute to improving the mental health and the quality of life of the working
people in Bangladesh.