Advertisement
Check your risk
Worried about getting cancer, diabetes, or a stroke? Assess your risk with one of our quick quizzes.
The best jokes
A while ago, our editor, Heather Parker, asked for readers' best jokes. Here they are.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND

Links
 Find a buddy
 Sexuality
 Psychology
 Food as medicine
 Healthy foods
 Life stages, Women
 Life stages, Men
 Pollen Counter
 Healthy Home
 Allergy Free Home
 Fitness Programmes

HIV/Aids - The caregiver
Burnout checklist
Last updated: Monday, June 23, 2008
Here is a checklist of the most common symptoms associated with burnout. Mentally tick off or write down the symptoms that you are experiencing at present.

This function of the checklist is to:

  1. alert you to the signs of exhaustion already present and the importance of finding ways to alleviate the pressure;
  2. provide you with a useful benchmark against which to compare your own functioning six months to a year down the line - especially if your energy levels are still high at this stage;
  3. provide you with a useful checklist against which to notice changes in colleagues' functioning, so that you can help them to recognise the signs of burnout.
 
Advertisement
>

Which (if any) of the following are your currently experiencing, or have you experienced in the past?

Physical:

  • Frequent Headaches
  • Change in appetite
  • Feelings of exhaustion or fatigue
  • Insomnia
  • Muscle aches or general aches and pains
  • Unable to shake of colds or bronchial complaints
  • Gastrointestinal disturbances
  • Shortness of breath
  • Skin complaints

Emotional:

  • Anxious
  • Frustrated
  • Discouraged
  • Touchy and irritable
  • Bad tempered
  • Easily moved to tears
  • Marked sadness
  • Screaming and shouting
  • Unwarrantedly suspicious and paranoid
  • Avoiding commitment to caring
  • Lethargic

Spiritual:

  • Emptiness
  • Loss of meaning
  • Doubt (of self and/or life)
  • Need to prove yourself
  • Lack of forgiveness (from others and/or for others)

Mental:

  • Dull senses
  • Forgetfulness
  • Confusion
  • Poor concentration
  • Negative attitude
  • Depression

Relational:

  • Isolation
  • Resentment
  • Distrust
  • Loneliness
  • Hiding

Work-related symptoms

  • Loss of interest in and commitment to work
  • A lack of job satisfaction
  • Failure to observe punctuality and neglect of duties
  • Feelings of inadequacy, helplessness and guilt
  • A loss of confidence and diminished self-esteem
  • A tendency to withdraw both from clients and from colleagues
  • A loss of sensitivity in dealing with clients or patients; referring to clients in a dehumanised or purely impersonal way (which may include sick humour)
  • Avoidance of clients or limiting the time spent with them, and frequent and earlier-than-necessary referral of clients to other health care professionals
  • Indifference to the suffering of others
  • Experiencing boredom with clients, and seeing all clients as being alike
  • A loss of quality in performance of work. Stressed out people often work harder, but accomplish less
  • Deteriorating relationships with colleagues
  • An increased use of alcohol or drugs in order to cope at home or at work
  • A decision to leave the job or profession

Managing stress and burnout
If you’ve said yes to a lot of the questions on the Burnout Checklist and you’ve realised that you are indeed at risk of burnout, the following skills and tips may help to cope.

Re-evaluate your professional expectations:

  • Know yourself.
  • Take time to think about what you realistically can expect from yourself and your clients or patients.
  • Set new more realistic goals if necessary.
  • Don’t take responsibility for things you cannot help or change.
  • Know what causes you stress, and work actively to reduce stress: learn to say no, share your workload, work co-operatively and not competitively.
  • Accept that you can only do your best, and nothing more, and that you are not perfect. You don’t always have to be “the best”. Allow yourself to be the ‘Good Enough Practitioner’.
  • Learn to set boundaries, to create limits and to say NO to unreasonable helping requests. Learn to pace yourself.
  • Have both long and short-term goals in your work with clients. In this manner, you may feel rewarded or have a sense that progress is being made along the way towards achieving your long-term vision.

Care for yourself:

  • You are responsible for your own physical and mental health. Look after yourself.
  • A healthy diet, and enough exercise, rest and sleep are important.
  • Nurture yourself. Take time out to do things that you enjoy, like walking, listening to music, or reading.
  • Search actively for ways to cope with stress that work for you, and use it: Relaxation exercises, breathing exercises, visualisation, yoga, self-hypnosis or meditation.
  • Learn how to be professional, but also how to be playful, have fun, tell jokes and laugh.
  • Find ways in which to spoil yourself: A bubble bath and chocolates, dinner with friends, a game of golf.
  • Create strict boundaries between your professional and personal lives.

Use support systems:

  • Create and use your personal support systems – someone like a spouse or partner to talk to.
  • Talk and listen to your colleagues. Share your concerns, problems and fears. To talk to a colleague about your frustrating experiences can help to ‘cleanse’ or purge you, allowing you to sweep clean and continue in your work.
  • Take initiative and form your own support group at work, if support groups do not exist.

Continuous training:

  • Do refresher courses and upgrade your skills.
  • Talk about stress, burnout and coping skills in training sessions.

Related Articles
Post a question to Cybershrink.
Burnout - is your fuse getting short?


 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent
 JOBS
Civil Engineering Technician
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Accountant
Gauteng - North/Sandton
Financial Manager
R550,000-600,000 Per Annum
Central African Republic
Financial Accountant
R300,000-340,000 Per Annum
Gauteng
Treasury Specialist
R500,000-630,000 Per Annum
Gauteng - East Rand
Credit Manager
R300,000-400,000 Per Annum
Mpumalanga
Financial Manager
R27,000-30,000 Per Month
Gauteng - North/Sandton
Delphi developers
Gauteng - North/Sandton
Previous Next
HIV/Aids menu
About HIV/Aids
Afrikaans
Basic disease information
Counselling
Different political stances
Disease prevention
Fitness & HIV
HIV & ...
HIV in the body
HIV+, what now?
Legal issues
Management of HIV/Aids
Nutrition and Aids
Real life story
Symptoms & Diseases associated
Testing
The caregiver
The South African culture
Transmission of HIV
When Aids sets in
Women & HIV
XVI International Aids Conference




 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement
 Top Condition
 Centres


© Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
  
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information.
Verify here.