These three burnout attributes can be used to derive the following important Burnout Profiles to identify patterns of the burnout experience. The profile types are Engaged, Ineffective, Overextended, Disengaged, and Burnout.
Burnout has many personal costs including physical illness, increased feelings of hopelessness, irritability, impatience, poor interpersonal relationships with family/coworkers/patients, and drug abuse. In severe cases, burnout can cause diminished executive functioning, attention, and memory.
Burnout has many organizational costs including absenteeism, increased turnover, and decreased job performance. These consequences have a direct negative effect on patient safety, satisfaction, and quality of care.
Burnout must be assessed for severity and cause, and remedied by individual intervention and meaningful organizational change programs.
Maslach Burnout Toolkit™ and Maslach Burnout Inventory™ are trademarks of Mind Garden, Inc.
Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) is the leading measure of burnout. It has been validated by 35+ years of research. In combination with the Areas of Worklife Survey (AWS), the Maslach Burnout Toolkit provides you with both the pattern and extent of burnout plus the likely causes. You can identify key areas of strength or weakness in your organizational setting that may be causing burnout.
The Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) assesses:
Emotional Exhaustion: feelings of being emotionally overextended and exhausted by work.
Depersonalization: unfeeling and impersonal responses toward patients.
Personal Accomplishment: feelings of competence and successful achievement in one's work with patients.
These scales can be combined to catagorize a person as Engaged, Ineffective, Overextended, Disengaged, or Burnout.
The Areas of Worklife Survey (AWS) measures aspects of the work environment which may be contributing to burnout:
Workload: amount of work to be done in a given time. Workload measures the extent to which work demands spill into one's personal life. It reflects the social, physical, and intellectual burden of work demands.
Control: opportunity to make choices and decisions, to solve problems, and to contribute to the fulfillment of responsibilities. Control is the participation in important decisions about work and the range of professional autonomy.
Reward: financial and social recognition received for contribution on the job. Reward includes praise, awards, perks, and salary.
Community: quality of the social context at work, encompassing relationships with managers, colleagues, subordinates, and patients.
Fairness: extent to which the organization has consistent and equitable rules for everyone, or the quality of justice and respect at work.
Values: what matters to the individual in their work. The focus is the consistency between personal values and the values inherent in the organization.
To see MBI Toolkit products and more information, select the form which applies to your group:
MBI-HSS (MP) Toolkit: for Medical Personnel
MBI-HSS Toolkit: for Human Services workers
MBI-GS Toolkit: for General use
Not sure which MBI Toolkit form to use? Compare forms.
The Group Report calculates and summarizes average AWS and MBI scores for your organizational group. Use this tool to organize your group data and understand which areas in your organization are contributing to burnout. The Group Report provides guidance on what can be done to prevent and remedy burnout in your organization. View a sample Group Report for General use. |
The Individual Report interprets an individual's AWS and MBI assessment scores, provides burnout profile comparisons, and recommends action steps to remedy burnout and address organizational issues. View a sample Individual Report for General use. |
The Transform Survey Hosting License provides AWS and MBI online assessment with automated data and scale scoring in a downloadable file. View Transform Survey Hosting for General Use. |
Organizations frequently want to sort their results by type of job, facility location, or other attributes. This enables administrators to focus remediation efforts where they are most needed. Mind Garden can customize your survey and reports to add demographics, logos and other instruments. Contact us for a customization quote.
Textual input items
Ask your participants open-ended questions to elicit powerful ideas for organizational improvement. Examples of questions:
Add other instruments to your survey
You can add other instruments to your survey for a fee. Listed below are some standardized instruments you may want to use to assess employee well-being:
Many burnout blogs and media stories advise changing personal behaviors to prevent or remedy burnout. Common advice includes managing exercise and sleep habits, and learning new coping strategies such as yoga and meditation. While changes to personal habits and routines can help individuals become more resilient against burnout, they do not address the actual areas of work that are causing stress in the first place. Burnout prevention and remediation begins and ends with organizational change. A canary in a coal mine alerts you to poor air quality there. But you don’t put an oxygen mask on the canary in order to keep the mine running -- you repair/remediate the mine.
The root causes for every team's or department's burnout are organizational problems and therefore the solution rests in deliberate organizational change. For example, if Workload is one of the major problems, you can implement strategies to increase headcount for the team. Or if there is a problem in Control, you can create a system to intervene in situations where employees feel micromanaged. There are solutions to strengthen every work environment domain measured by the AWS - some simple and others more complex. The Maslach Burnout Toolkit Group Report lists intervention suggestions for each work area and is a great resource for designing burnout solutions.
Remember: in order to prevent and fully remedy burnout, solutions must focus on organizational change - not personal change. If the work environment continues to be overwhelming or toxic, no amount of exercise, sleep, yoga, or meditation will alleviate burnout for good. Be an organization against burnout - create meaningful change now!
Understanding Burnout Solutions
The best thing you can do to understand how to make positive change in your organization is to read a copy of Christina Maslach and Michael Leiter's excellent book on burnout. The Burnout Challenge provides pragmatic, creative and cost-effective solutions to improve employee efficiency, health and happiness.
Other Books on Burnout:
Preventing Physician Burnout: Curing the Chaos and Returning Joy to the Practice of Medicine
DeChant, P., & Shannon, D. W. (2016). Preventing physician burnout: Curing the chaos and returning joy to the practice of medicine. North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
Reignite: From Burned Out to On Fire.
Gaither, C. (2018). Reignite: From burned out to on fire. Lifestyle Entrepreneurs Press.
Banishing Burnout: Six Strategies for Improving Your Relationship with Work
Leiter, M. P., & Maslach, C. (2005). Banishing burnout: Six strategies for improving your relationship with work. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
The Truth About Burnout: How Organizations Cause Personal Stress and What to Do About It
Maslach, C., & Leiter, M. P. (1997). The truth about burnout: How organizations cause personal stress and what to do about it. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Taking Action Against Clinician Burnout: A Systems Approach to Professional Well-Being
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2019. Taking action against clinician burnout: A systems approach to professional well-being. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
Articles:
Maslach, C., and Leiter, M.P. (2021). How to Measure Burnout Accurately and Ethically. Harvard Business Review.
Maslach, C., Leiter, M.P., & Jackson, S.E., (2012). Making a significant difference with burnout interventions: Researcher and practitioner collaboration. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 33, 296–300.
Your leadership team has responsibility for preparing employees for your solution, leading implementation of the solution, and soliciting feedback about the solution's effectiveness. Set up your burnout solution for success by developing Transformational Leadership and Psychological Capital. Together, Transformational Leadership and Psychological Capital (PsyCap) can create greater alignment around your vision for change, decrease cynicism, and build unit cohesion and commitment. Transformational Leadership and PsyCap can be measured and developed using the Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire™ (MLQ) and Psychological Capital Questionnaire (PCQ), respectively.
Transformational leadership is influencing others’ awareness of what is important. It moves people to see themselves and the opportunities and challenges of their environment in a new way. Transformational Leadership creates greater alignment around strategic visions and mission, greater unit cohesion and commitment, lower turnover, and safer work environments.
Why Transformational Leadership for today’s organizations?
Organizations today (a) are faced with turbulent conditions and rapid changes in technology, (b) must continuously develop employees to retain the best talent, and (c) are confronted with many more "unresolvable" and new problems.
The organization that supports and encourages the development of Transformational Leaders:
Note: section adapted from Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire Trainer's Guide Second Edition by Bernard Bass & Bruce Avolio (Copyright © 1999. 2011, 2018).
Transformational Leadership encompasses five leadership behaviors:
Measure and Develop Transformational Leadership in Your Organization
The Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire™ (MLQ) is the benchmark instrument to measure transformational leadership. Use the MLQ II 360 Suite to measure and develop Transformational Leadership in your organization’s leaders. This report provides a deep analysis of a leader's behaviors across a full range of leadership styles by gathering ratings and feedback from multiple stakeholders. It is a critical tool to develop leaders who can successfully initiate and sustain organizational change. You may also want to measure Authentic Leadership, which is related to other positive organizational outcomes, by using the MLQ 360 Leader's Report with Authentic Leadership Styles.
Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire™ is a trademark of Mind Garden, Inc.
Psychological Capital (or “PsyCap”) is an individual’s positive psychological state of development characterized by hope, efficacy, resilience, and optimism. An organization with high employee PsyCap can adapt quickly for successful organizational change initiatives.
PsyCap has undergone extensive theory-building and research and has been shown to:
PsyCap is state-like and can therefore be developed. Luthans, Avey, and Patera (2008) found that PsyCap can be developed effectively and cheaply through a short, highly focused web-based intervention.
PsyCap encompasses four characteristics:
Measure and Develop PsyCap in Your Organization
The Psychological Capital Questionnaire (PCQ) measures PsyCap with 24 items and has undergone extensive psychometric analyses and support from samples representing service, manufacturing, education, high-tech, military, and cross-cultural sectors. Use the PCQ Multi-rater Report to measure and develop PsyCap in your organization. This report provides a deep analysis of your employees’ hope, efficacy, resilience, and optimism skills by gathering ratings from multiple stakeholders. The PCQ Individual Report is also available for self-assessments (without ratings from others). Use the PCQ Group Report to gain insight on your organization's average PsyCap. It is a critical tool to establish your employees’ readiness for organizational change.
Avey, J. B., Reichard, R. J., Luthans, F., & Mhatre, K. H. (2011). Meta-analysis of the impact of positive psychological capital on employee attitudes, behaviors, and performance. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 22(2), 127-152.
Avey, J.B., Wernsing, T. S., & Luthans, F. (2008). Can positive employees help positive organization change? The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 44, 48-70.
Clapp-Smith, R., Vogelgesang, G. R., & Avey, J. B. (2009). Authentic leadership and positive psychological capital: The mediating role of trust at the group level of analysis. Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies, 15(3), 227-240.
Luthans, F., Avey, J. B., & Patera, J. L. (2008). Experimental analysis of a web-based intervention to develop positive psychological capital. Academy of Management Learning and Education, 7, 209-221.
Luthans, F., Norman, S. M., Avolio, B. J., & Avey, J. B. (2008). The mediating role of psychological capital in the supportive organizational climate-employee performance relationship. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 28, 219-238.
Peterson, S. J., & Zhang, Z. (2011). Examining the relationships between top management team psychological characteristics, transformational leadership, and business unit performance. In M. A. Carpenter (Ed.), Handbook of top management research (pp. 127-149). New York, NY: Edward Elgar Publishing.