Burnout - Engagement and personality factors in medical students at a public university
Keywords:
Burnout, Engagement, Personality factors, Coping strategies, WellbeingAbstract
Medical students can develop burnout syndrome, characterized by exhaustion, cynical attitude towards study and negative consequences on wellbeing and academic performance. Engagement, theoretically syndrome “opposite” to burnout, shows a positive influence on personal and academic performance. To study the association of syndromes burnout and engagement with personality factors in medical students, a longitudinal observational, descriptive study of a cohort follow-up was performed. Three questionnaires were used: reduced inventory NEO Five-Factor (NEO FFI) administered at the beginning of the sixth year; the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey and Utrecht Work Engagement Scale, applied at the end of the seventh year. 120 students participated. The chance of presenting burnout was 3 times higher when the student had 0.26 times higher neuroticism and high extraversion lower when presented. The chance to present engagement was 10 times higher in students who had high extraversion (Multilevel logistic regression model, p <0.05). It would be important to further research into the mechanisms underlying personality factors could favor the onset of burnout and engagement syndromes, and carry out strategies to prevent the consequences of academic stress on the most vulnerable students.