WHO Now Classifies 'Burnout' as a 'Syndrome'
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HIRE NOWThe World Health Organisation is bringing awareness to the problem of work-related stress. The organisation announced this week that it is renewing its definition of burnout in the new version of its handbook of diseases, the International Classification of Diseases — ICD-11 —which will go into effect in January 2022.
The new definition calls it a "syndrome" and specifically ties burnout to "chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed."
Burnout according to the WHO
Despite initial reports to the contrary, WHO does not list the problem as a medical condition. It describes burnout an "occupational phenomenon" and inserts it in a chapter on "factors influencing health status or contact with health services."
According to WHO, burnout is identified by "feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion; increased mental distance from one's job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one's job; and reduced professional efficacy."
Burnout was also added in the previous version of WHO's disease handbook, the ICD-10, in the same category as it now appears. But it was defined only as a "state of vital exhaustion," Tarik Jasarevic, a spokesperson for WHO, wrote in an email.
The earlier definition "was kind of this weird in-between 'you're not really sick, but you're not fully capable of doing your work,' " says Torsten Voigt, a sociologist at RWTH Aachen University in Germany, who published a review of existing studies on burnout in 2017.
He says the current definition is now more detailed and though it's not a significant change, it gives people who suffer burnout more legitimacy.
"People who feel burnout are finally fully recognised as having a severe issue," he says. The current definition may be a step toward making it accessible for people to get help, at least in some European countries, where health professionals rely on the ICD, he added.
Bringing awareness
Bringing more clarity to the definition of burnout is necessary, says Elaine Cheung, a professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "There needs to be greater critical discussion on how we can more precisely measure and define this condition," she said.
She added that she welcomes the WHO's updated definition because it will raise awareness about the problems of burnout not only between health care workers but also employees and employers.
"I think a lot of people have a lay definition of what burnout may be," she says. "But I think by highlighting the specific facets of burnout ... my hope is that it might create greater awareness."
Cheung says many studies show that certain aspects of workplace culture can increase risk of burnout.
She says employers have a significant role in addressing burnout by paying attention to whether employees have:
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a sense of community at work,
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strong social relationships,
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a collegial environment,
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a workload that's not too burdensome,
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a sense of agency at work, and
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a healthy work-life balance.
The new WHO definition also requires that to diagnose burnout, mental health professionals have to rule out anxiety, mood disorders and other stress-related disorders.
Cheung thinks that's crucial. "Burnout is different from depression in that it is tied specifically to our work and our relationship with our work," she says. She believes that understanding this difference could lead to more targeted research on how to prevent and treat burnout.
WHO also stated it plans to start developing evidence-based guidelines on mental health in the workplace.
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Source: NPR
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