| dc.description.abstract | 
Burnout significantly impacts service, productivity, and wellbeing of mental health 
professionals. Designing effective intervention strategy to prevent burnout required strong 
evidence base on the contributors of burnout. This study was designed in the context of 
limited knowledge on burnout and its contributors among mental health professionals in 
Bangladesh. With the overarching aim to identify predictors of burnout, this study explored 
putative contributors of burnout and then carried out multiple regression to identify 
significant predictors.  
Exploration component included desk review and evaluation by a panel with experts 
which resulted in listing of 16 putative contributors. Suitable tools are assembled to measure 
these factors. The set of tools included a few already available instruments namely, the Ten 
Item Personality Inventory (TIPI-B), the Coping Scale, Steel Injustice Inventory, and the 
Copenhagen Burnout Inventory along with a few custom-built instruments. A cross
sectional questionnaire survey was conducted with a sample of 292 mental health 
professionals from psychiatry, clinical psychology, counseling psychology, and educational 
psychology background. 
Results identified multiple predictors of burnout for the mental health professionals 
in Bangladesh. Workplace aggression (β = .235, p < .001), neuroticism (β = -.211, p < .001), 
and nonadaptive coping (β = -.191, p < .001) were the strongest predictors of personal 
burnout. Stressful work (β = .225, p < .001), workplace aggression (β = .208, p < .001), and 
neuroticism (β = -.205, p < .001) were the strongest predictors of work-related burnout. 
Workplace aggression (β = .255, p < .001), neuroticism (β = -.195, p < .001), and adaptive 
coping (β = -.197, p < .001) were the strongest predictors of client-related burnout among 
mental health professionals in Bangladesh. Comparison of burnout revealed statistically 
IV 
significant difference in personal burnout (F3, 288 = 21.508, p < .001), work-related burnout 
(F3, 288 = 8.780, p < .001) & client-related burnout (F3, 288 = 13.559, p < .001) scores among 
different mental health professional groups. Subsequent multiple comparisons of the mean 
burnout score indicated clinical psychologist having significantly higher burnout among the 
four groups in terms of personal (M = 41.22, SD =18.88) and work-related burnout (M = 
34.23, SD = 20.02) while psychiatrists have higher client-related burnout (M = 30.67, SD = 
22.47).  
The findings of the study are likely to be useful for the key stakeholders of mental 
health service delivery in Bangladesh. This may be especially beneficial in developing and 
implementing evidence informed strategy to prevent burnout among mental health 
professionals in Bangladesh. | 
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