Risk factors associated with physical therapist burnout: a systematic review

Abstract

Background

Studies consistently suggest that work as a physical therapist is associated with burnout, yet no review of the contributing factors has been conducted.

Objective

To identify and examine the risk factors associated with physical therapist burnout.

Data sources

PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library were searched from inception to May 2020.

Eligibility criteria

Quantitative studies of physical therapists in clinical practice who experience burnout symptoms or syndrome.

Data extraction and data synthesis

Risk factors such as characteristics of the participant, environment, structures, and experiences that demonstrate a significant predisposition to burnout were extracted. The modified Downs and Black checklist was used to identify risk of bias.

Results

Forty-six studies (8717 participants) were included. The risk of bias assessment determined all were of fair or poor quality. Fifty-three risk factors were identified, with four being classified as unavoidable and forty-nine determined as avoidable. The avoidable risk factors were further categorized as either structural/organizational (32%), psychological/emotional (19%), environmental (19%), or sociodemographic (13%).

Limitations

A risk factor’s importance may not correlate with its prevalence, and the low-quality studies limit the ability to make definitive conclusions.

Conclusion

A significant amount of literature has identified a wide variety of risk factors. The majority are avoidable, and the effect and degree to which each risk factor contributes to burnout varies. The identified risk factors can help develop targeted prevention and intervention strategies for the benefit of physical therapists, organizations, and policymakers.

Funding

This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Systematic Review Registration Number

PROSPERO CRD42020136356.