The buffering role of resilience on burnout, depression, anxiety, and stress among healthcare workers in Sri Lanka
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Springer Nature
Abstract
Burnout, depression, anxiety, and stress are overlapping, yet distinct constructs. Mental health problems like depression
and anxiety can occur as a consequence of burnout. Resilience, on the other hand, can potentially protect against burnout
as well as its mental health consequences. This study aimed to explore the relationship between burnout, depression,
anxiety, stress, and resilience among healthcare workers (HCWs), and to investigate the moderating role of resilience
against the mental health correlates of burnout. For this purpose, using a cross-sectional design, 318 HCWs from various
categories (nurses, midwives, doctors, etc.) recruited from hospital and community settings in two Districts of Sri Lanka
during the COVID-19 pandemic were surveyed using the Copenhagen Burnout Inventory (CBI), Depression, Anxiety
and Stress Scale (DASS-21), and the Brief Resilience Scale. CBI assessed three domains: personal burnout, work burnout
and client burnout. The prevalence of personal, work, and client burnout were 26.4%, 12.9%, and 7.9%, respectively.
The prevalence of low, normal, and high resilience was 25.6%, 66.2%, and 8.6%, respectively. All three burnout domains
correlated positively with depression, anxiety, and stress. Resilience correlated inversely with all burnout domains and
DASS-21 scores. In moderator analysis, higher levels of resilience dampened the effects of client burnout on anxiety,
but resilience moderated the psychological consequences of personal burnout in the opposite direction. Our findings
indicate notable rates of burnout among Sri Lankan HCWs, and suggest a possible buffering role of resilience against
burnout and its psychological consequences.
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Baminiwatta, A., Fernando, R., Gadambanathan, T., Jiyatha, F., Maryam, K. H., Premaratne, I., Kuruppuarachchi, L., Wickremasinghe, R., & Hapangama, A. (2025). The buffering role of resilience on burnout, depression, anxiety, and stress among healthcare workers in Sri Lanka. Discover Psychology, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s44202-025-00345-4