Frontiers in Public Health (Nov 2022)

Measurement of burnout during the prolonged pandemic in the Chinese zero-COVID context: COVID-19 burnout views scale

  • Sam S. S. Lau,
  • Sam S. S. Lau,
  • Sam S. S. Lau,
  • Sam S. S. Lau,
  • Cherry C. Y. Ho,
  • Cherry C. Y. Ho,
  • Cherry C. Y. Ho,
  • Rebecca C. K. Pang,
  • Rebecca C. K. Pang,
  • Rebecca C. K. Pang,
  • Susan Su,
  • Susan Su,
  • Susan Su,
  • Heather Kwok,
  • Heather Kwok,
  • Heather Kwok,
  • Sai-fu Fung,
  • Roger C. Ho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.1039450
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Burnout is an important public health issue at times of the COVID-19 pandemic. Current measures which focus on work-based burnout have limitations in length and/or relevance. When stepping into the post-pandemic as a new Norm Era, the burnout scale for the general population is urgently needed to fill the gap. This study aimed to develop a COVID-19 Burnout Views Scale (COVID-19 BVS) to measure burnout views of the general public in a Chinese context and examine its psychometric properties. A multiphase approach including literature review, expert consultation, and pilot testing was adopted in developing the scale. The scale was administered to a sample of 1,078 of the general public in Hong Kong with an average age of 34.45 years (SD = 12.47). Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analyses suggested a 5-item unidimensional model of COVID-19 BVS. The CFA results indicated that the COVID-19 BVS had a good model fit, as χ2 (10.054)/5 = 2.01, SRMR = 0.010, CFI = 0.998, RMSEA = 0.031. Five items were maintained in EFA with high internal consistency in terms of Cronbach's α of 0.845 and McDonald's ω coefficient of 0.87, and the corrected item-to-total correlations of 0.512 to 0.789 are way above the acceptable range. The KMO values of 0.841 and Bartlett's Test of Sphericity (p < 0.01) verified the normal distribution of the EFA and the adequacy of the EFA sampling. The analyses suggest that the COVID-19 BVS is a promising tool for assessing burnout views on the impacts of the epidemic on the Chinese general populations.

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