Depersonalization reconsidered: An empirical analysis of the relation between depersonalization and cynicism in an extended version of the Maslach Burnout Inventory
Engelsk titel: Depersonalization reconsidered: An empirical analysis of the relation between depersonalization and cynicism in an extended version of the Maslach Burnout Inventory
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Författare:
Larsen, Anne Cecilie
;
Ulleberg, Pål
;
Rönnestad, Michael Helge
Email: anne-cecilie.larsen@hioa.no
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 63
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 18010271
Sammanfattning
The Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI), the most widely used operationalization of burnout, exists
in two qualitatively different versions (Human Services Survey/Educators Survey and General
Survey). One common concept, however, is used to characterize the measured phenomenon.
The aim of the present study is to investigate two associated dimensions of burnout –
depersonalization and cynicism – as operationalized in two versions of the MBI. The dimensions
have been described and used as related expressions of mental distancing within the burnout
concept, but the relation between the two aspects of distancing have to a little degree been
studied empirically and previous studies have been limited to confirmatory factor analyses.
In this study, exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, analyses of correlations between
burnout scales and analyses of correlations between burnout scales and different antecedents
of burnout, other work-related attitudes and psychological distress were conducted for eight
different human services professions in Norway (N = 1798). The results showed that depersonalization
and cynicism emerged as two correlated, but distinct, dimensions, and the results were
robust across factor analytic methods and correlation analyses. In addition, partial correlation
analyses showed that depersonalization shared very little unique variance with the criterion
variables, whereas cynicism shares considerably more unique variance with the same variables.
The findings cast doubts on the conception of depersonalization and cynicism as related facets
of a common, overarching burnout concept and suggest that cynicism is a more central aspect
of burnout than is depersonalization.