BURNOUT IN GHANAIAN HOSPITALS: PHASE MODEL FINDINGS IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

This replication shows the expected covariation of the phases of burnout with a set of 5 marker variables. As the phases progress I --- > VIII, so do decreases or deficits occur on all the marker variables. All covariants far surpass usually-accepted levels of statistical significance, although t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health and human services administration 1997, Vol.19 (4), p.442-466
Hauptverfasser: FIADZO, EMMANUEL, GOLEMBIEWSKI, ROBERT T., LUO, HUAPING, BRADBURY, MARK, RIVERA, TAMMY LYNN
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 442
container_title Journal of health and human services administration
container_volume 19
creator FIADZO, EMMANUEL
GOLEMBIEWSKI, ROBERT T.
LUO, HUAPING
BRADBURY, MARK
RIVERA, TAMMY LYNN
description This replication shows the expected covariation of the phases of burnout with a set of 5 marker variables. As the phases progress I --- > VIII, so do decreases or deficits occur on all the marker variables. All covariants far surpass usually-accepted levels of statistical significance, although the magnitudes are not as great as in much other research with the phases. The Ghanaian incidence of the phases is also compared with several panels of populations. Those comparisons at once indicate a substantial Ghanaian incidence of advanced phases, as well as a distribution comparable to North American worksettings and more favorable than a panel of global worksettings.
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subjects Analysis of Variance
Burnout
Burnout, Professional - epidemiology
Canada
Causal covariation
Depersonalization
Exhaustion
Female
Ghana - epidemiology
Government services
Health administration
Health Policy
Health Status
Humans
Incidence
Job Satisfaction
Male
Occupational Health - statistics & numerical data
Personnel, Hospital - psychology
Personnel, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
Psychiatric hospitals
Psychological stress
Questionnaires
Statistical significance
Teaching hospitals
United States
title BURNOUT IN GHANAIAN HOSPITALS: PHASE MODEL FINDINGS IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
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