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      ‘I'm So Stressed!’: A Longitudinal Model of Stress, Burnout and Engagement among Social Workers in Child Welfare Settings

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          Abstract

          The well-documented day-to-day and long-term experiences of job stress and burnout among employees in child welfare organisations increasingly raise concerns among leaders, policy makers and scholars. Testing a theory-driven longitudinal model, this study seeks to advance understanding of the differential impact of job stressors (work–family conflict, role conflict and role ambiguity) and burnout (emotional exhaustion and depersonalisation) on employee disengagement (work withdrawal and exit-seeking behaviours). Data were collected at three six-month intervals from an availability sample of 362 front line social workers or social work supervisors who work in a large urban public child welfare organisation in the USA. The study's results yielded a good model fit (RMSEA = 0.06, CFI = 0.96, NFI = 0.94). Work–family conflict, role ambiguity and role conflict were found to impact work withdrawal and exit-seeking behaviours indirectly through burnout. The outcome variable, exit-seeking behaviours, was positively impacted by depersonalisation and work withdrawal at a statistically significant level. Overall, findings, at least in the US context, highlight the importance of further examining the development of job burnout among social workers and social work supervisors working in child welfare settings, as well as the utility of long-term administrative strategies to mitigate risks of burnout development and support engagement.

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          Using Mutivariate Statistics

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            Job burnout.

            Burnout is a prolonged response to chronic emotional and interpersonal stressors on the job, and is defined by the three dimensions of exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy. The past 25 years of research has established the complexity of the construct, and places the individual stress experience within a larger organizational context of people's relation to their work. Recently, the work on burnout has expanded internationally and has led to new conceptual models. The focus on engagement, the positive antithesis of burnout, promises to yield new perspectives on interventions to alleviate burnout. The social focus of burnout, the solid research basis concerning the syndrome, and its specific ties to the work domain make a distinct and valuable contribution to people's health and well-being.
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              Missing data: our view of the state of the art.

              Statistical procedures for missing data have vastly improved, yet misconception and unsound practice still abound. The authors frame the missing-data problem, review methods, offer advice, and raise issues that remain unresolved. They clear up common misunderstandings regarding the missing at random (MAR) concept. They summarize the evidence against older procedures and, with few exceptions, discourage their use. They present, in both technical and practical language, 2 general approaches that come highly recommended: maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian multiple imputation (MI). Newer developments are discussed, including some for dealing with missing data that are not MAR. Although not yet in the mainstream, these procedures may eventually extend the ML and MI methods that currently represent the state of the art.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Br J Soc Work
                Br J Soc Work
                social
                bjsw
                British Journal of Social Work
                Oxford University Press
                0045-3102
                1468-263X
                June 2016
                04 March 2015
                : 46
                : 4
                : 1076-1095
                Affiliations
                1Catalyst Research Center for Corporate Practice, Catalyst, 120 Wall Street, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10005
                2Center for Social Work Research, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78715
                3School of Social Work, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089–0411
                Author notes
                *Correspondence to Dnika J. Travis, Ph.D., Catalyst, 120 Wall Street 15th Floor, New York, NY 10005, USA. E-mail: dtravis@ 123456catalyst.org
                Article
                bct205
                10.1093/bjsw/bct205
                4986087
                27559215
                3db34baf-05bc-4e90-86a8-94cbcbda993a
                © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Association of Social Workers. All rights reserved.
                History
                : October 2013
                Page count
                Pages: 20
                Categories
                Articles

                burnout,employee disengagement,exit-seeking behaviours,job stress,work withdrawal,work–family conflict

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