“I should have known”. The perceptual barriers faced by mental health practitioners in recognising and responding to their own burnout symptoms
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
Asia Pacific Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
School
School of Business and Law
RAS ID
31351
Abstract
Studies have shown burnout to be a significant problem in the mental health field, causing workers serious health problems and reducing quality of care provided to clients. Yet despite mental health practitioners’ training in supporting others’ emotional health, they may be reluctant to seek help for burnout symptoms. This paper addresses this paradox by showing how human cognitive processes could act as powerful blocks to the recognition of and response to burnout. Fifty-five mental health practitioners’ beliefs and perceptions about burnout were examined using qualitative interview and survey data interpreted through a phenomenological perspective on attribution theory. The study identified four perceptual biases and identified professional identity and stress-induced cognitive deficit having influence on the recognition and response to burnout.
DOI
10.1080/21507686.2019.1634600
Access Rights
subscription content
Comments
Ledingham, M. D., Standen, P., Skinner, C., & Busch, R. (2019). “I should have known”. The perceptual barriers faced by mental health practitioners in recognising and responding to their own burnout symptoms. Asia Pacific Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 10(2), 125-145.
Available here.