Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Compassion and burnout in community mental heal...

Electronic data

View graph of relations

Compassion and burnout in community mental health work

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

Compassion and burnout in community mental health work. / Wass, Rachel.
Lancaster: Lancaster University, 2014. 204 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

Wass, R 2014, 'Compassion and burnout in community mental health work', PhD, Lancaster University, Lancaster.

APA

Wass, R. (2014). Compassion and burnout in community mental health work. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University.

Vancouver

Wass R. Compassion and burnout in community mental health work. Lancaster: Lancaster University, 2014. 204 p.

Author

Wass, Rachel. / Compassion and burnout in community mental health work. Lancaster : Lancaster University, 2014. 204 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{751487585f644ed79aeff8735604dfa3,
title = "Compassion and burnout in community mental health work",
abstract = "This doctoral thesis has three main sections: a systematic literature review, an empirical research paper and a critical appraisal. The literature review considers the factors associated with burnout in community mental health staff. Having synthesised the results of 28 papers, eight domains were identified that were associated with burnout. These included socio-demographics, work demographics, job stress and demand, support and supervision, individual characteristics, team context, client characteristics and role perception. Poor methodological rigour restricts the conclusions drawn from the reviewed papers, however a number of organisational factors were found to be of importance. The empirical paper considers the process behind the loss and maintenance of compassion in community mental health staff. Having interviewed 11 participants and utilised a grounded theory informed methodology, four core categories were identified; adopting a compassionate stance towards others, the uphill struggle, accessing a reflective space and working within a threatening system. The findings of this paper highlight the importance of reflective practice for mental health professionals and the influence of wider systemic factors. Lastly, the critical appraisal offers an extension of the study findings and reflections about conducting research in the field of compassion, as well as considering a number of decisions that were made with regard to the project.",
keywords = "Compassion, Bunrout, Community, Mental Health",
author = "Rachel Wass",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Compassion and burnout in community mental health work

AU - Wass, Rachel

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - This doctoral thesis has three main sections: a systematic literature review, an empirical research paper and a critical appraisal. The literature review considers the factors associated with burnout in community mental health staff. Having synthesised the results of 28 papers, eight domains were identified that were associated with burnout. These included socio-demographics, work demographics, job stress and demand, support and supervision, individual characteristics, team context, client characteristics and role perception. Poor methodological rigour restricts the conclusions drawn from the reviewed papers, however a number of organisational factors were found to be of importance. The empirical paper considers the process behind the loss and maintenance of compassion in community mental health staff. Having interviewed 11 participants and utilised a grounded theory informed methodology, four core categories were identified; adopting a compassionate stance towards others, the uphill struggle, accessing a reflective space and working within a threatening system. The findings of this paper highlight the importance of reflective practice for mental health professionals and the influence of wider systemic factors. Lastly, the critical appraisal offers an extension of the study findings and reflections about conducting research in the field of compassion, as well as considering a number of decisions that were made with regard to the project.

AB - This doctoral thesis has three main sections: a systematic literature review, an empirical research paper and a critical appraisal. The literature review considers the factors associated with burnout in community mental health staff. Having synthesised the results of 28 papers, eight domains were identified that were associated with burnout. These included socio-demographics, work demographics, job stress and demand, support and supervision, individual characteristics, team context, client characteristics and role perception. Poor methodological rigour restricts the conclusions drawn from the reviewed papers, however a number of organisational factors were found to be of importance. The empirical paper considers the process behind the loss and maintenance of compassion in community mental health staff. Having interviewed 11 participants and utilised a grounded theory informed methodology, four core categories were identified; adopting a compassionate stance towards others, the uphill struggle, accessing a reflective space and working within a threatening system. The findings of this paper highlight the importance of reflective practice for mental health professionals and the influence of wider systemic factors. Lastly, the critical appraisal offers an extension of the study findings and reflections about conducting research in the field of compassion, as well as considering a number of decisions that were made with regard to the project.

KW - Compassion

KW - Bunrout

KW - Community

KW - Mental Health

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

CY - Lancaster

ER -