Trials (Mar 2021)

Clinical research and burnout syndrome in Italy – only a physicians’ affair?

  • Celeste Cagnazzo,
  • Roberto Filippi,
  • Giulia Zucchetti,
  • Rosita Cenna,
  • Cristiana Taverniti,
  • Agata Sue Ellen Guarrera,
  • Stefano Stabile,
  • Irene Federici,
  • Manuela Monti,
  • Sara Pirondi,
  • Sara Testoni,
  • Franca Fagioli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05158-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background The burnout phenomenon has been extensively investigated among health care professionals, particularly focusing on physicians and nurses. However, literature concerning burnout in clinical research is poor and often neglects the other professional categories involved. Methods In March 2019, all members of Italian Group of Clinical Research Coordinator were invited to participate to a web survey, consisting of three sections: general information and workload; Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) test; subjective perception of oneself’s work stress and possible causes. Results The majority of respondents felt a form of distress. The main source was contract type (31.2%), followed by workload (20.5%) and lack of skills recognition (17.8%). Results from MBI test confirmed the interviewees’ subjective perception: an intermediate level of emotional exhaustion (19.1 points) and a very high sense of reduced professional achievement (26.8 points) were observed. Both depersonalization and sense of reduced professional achievement showed weak to moderate correlations with emotional exhaustion. Emotional exhaustion was associated with contract type with high significance. Conclusion It is necessary to act on those qualitative factors that are greatly increasing the level of perceived stress, jeopardizing the quality of clinical research coordinators work and significantly amplifying the phenomenon of migration towards the private sector.

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