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Published Online: June 1979

Staff Burnout in Work With Long-Term Patients

Abstract

The seeds of staff burnout are planted when mental health professionals who work with long-term patients do not recognize that such patients vary greatly in their potential for rehabilitation. This situation leads to unrealistic expectations and frustrations for staff. The concept of normalization, if misapplied, can lead to the same result. Contributing to the frustration is administrative pressure on staff to produce impossible results. Staff's ambivalence about gratifying dependency needs of patients and uncertainty about their own needs and motivations also can lead to burnout.

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Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 396 - 398

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Published in print: June 1979
Published online: 7 October 2014

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H. Richard Lamb
Department of Psychiatry and the Behavioral Sciences University of Southern California School of Medicine Los Angeles, California

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