Abstract
Value fulfillment has recently been proposed as fundamental to the development and prevention of burnout, although this remains untested. The present study distributed a survey to Australian General Practitioners (primary care physicians), yielding a sample of 1,157 individuals. Participants were asked about their burnout and wellbeing levels, autonomy, personal values and value fulfillment, and professional diversification. Value fulfillment was moderately, negatively correlated with burnout (r = .53), with post-hoc tests noting each level of wellbeing was associated with a higher degree of value fulfillment. A hierarchical regression showed that value fulfillment predicted a further 10% of variance in burnout levels after controlling for professional autonomy and satisfaction. These results suggest value fulfillment may represent an important avenue for further theoretical and interventional research to prevent burnout and promote wellbeing. The results support a holistic, rather than professionally-bound, conceptualization of burnout.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners under the Harry Nespolon Foundation Grant.
Disclosure statement
All members of the research team began their employment with the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners after the completion of this research project. The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners did not have any involvement in the analysis or reporting of findings from this project.
Geolocation information
This study was conducted across Australia.
Data availability statement
Due to the confidential nature of data collected, data are not publicly available.