The subject of burnout in a form of emotional exhaustion has become imperative in health organizations because of the emerging trends in employment and its related problems. It is been ascertained that unhealthy practice environment is a major threat in the incidence of emotional exhaustion among nursing workforce (1); and any organisational culture that does not support its personnel has burnout costs. Emotional exhaustion is defined as syndrome characterized by losing enthusiasm for work (2); and it is conceptualised as a response to a discrepancy between job-related strains and resources that is presented through feelings of emotional fatigue (3, 4). It develops from defects in the structural and psychological make-ups in an organisation (5); and the study of this phenomenon in other jurisdictions among nurses have produced distinctive outcomes that need a critical look.
Among health workers, the nursing workforce is mostly found to report constantly complex intensity of emotional exhaustion. The frequency ranges between 15 and 85% among nurses and midwives. It is, however, common among Intensive Care Units (ICUs) nurses and those who provide reproductive health services (6, 7, 8). The resultant consequences are low staff productivity and dissatisfaction of care provided by health caregivers (9, 10). Within the context of a hospital setting, nurses in various units are duty bound to provide care to patients in settings associated with complex care and impending death. They also face death and grief situations on daily basis, and are at risk of becoming more susceptible to psychological repercussions and stress, frequently occasioning in emotional exhaustion (11). Burnout at workplace gives rise to chronic adverse emotions such as anger, anxiety or depression, mental exhaustion, apprehension, low enthusiasm, and absenteeism which certainly endangers not only the nurses own health, but also their patients (12, 13). Emotional exhaustion of nurses has been identified to increased work-related infections, increased medication error, high incidence of patients’ fall, poor nurse-physician relations, low personal accomplishment of the nurse, job dissatisfaction and increased turnover intention (14, 15).
In low-middle-income countries (LMICs), where nurses undertake their task in unfavourable practice environment (uncomfortable postures, extreme noise intensities, and congested work area), there is moderate to higher dimensions of burnout in the form of emotional exhaustion (16). This obviously make the responsibility of giving care to patient extra demanding. The interactions between professional’s emotional exhaustion and practice environment cannot be underestimated; as workplace which boast of quality leadership and nurses’ involvement in decision-making presents with low levels of exhaustion (17, 18, 19). Greater autonomy for nurses in respect of adequate staffing and resources and positive nurse-physician relation has also been found to improve this phenomenon; and thus reflects on nurses’ job satisfaction and the enhanced quality of care to clients (20, 21, 22).
With World Health Organization report on nursing workforce stating that more nurses are required in attaining satisfactory nurse-patient ratio especially in LMICs (23); measures are needed to reduce emotional exhaustion among nurses. Potential widening of the disproportion of nurse-patient ratio places huge workload that build continuous psychosomatic stress on nurses in a form fatigue and emotional exhaustion. In extreme cases, emotional exhaustion results in work-family conflict for the nurse (24, 25, 26).
In Sub-Saharan Africa, organisational factors (demands from job, control over work, social support, and interpersonal relationships, and change over the role of staff) considerably impact on staff’s emotional exhaustion. Most nurses have increased chances of exhaustion relative to other health care providers (27, 28). Accordingly, (29) reiterate that unsafe nurse-to-patient ratio in most health care facilities in Ghana result in increased levels of stress among health staff. Complains of inadequate recognition from clients and their relations and the community usually serve as the main cause of nurses’ emotional exhaustion. Additionally, some nurses also experience emotional exhaustion in a form of despair when their patients relapse or their condition deteriorate despite the amount of time and quality of care provided to them (30). Importantly, challenges of role ambiguity of nurses who are upgraded without adequate training on their new roles usually cause an upsurge in job burdens. Such situations increase the amount of work by nurses; and inadequate human and material resources to perform these roles result in emotional exhaustion (31). Burnout compromises nursing care, thus delay in the recuperating time of patients and avoidable deaths; and also affect nurses’ loyalty to an organisation thereby increasing turnover intentions (32, 33).
Emotional exhaustion among nurses in Ghana has not been given considerable attention, as most studies are directed towards other work-related risks with emphasis placed primarily on healthcare professionals in general. Besides, in circumstances where emotional exhaustion has been studied, it is generally restricted to a few categories of nurses; therefore, the trends among the broad segment of nursing staff cannot be evaluated. Additionally, in order to ameliorate the hazards caused by emotional exhaustion, and its compounding effects on job satisfaction, quality nursing care delivery and turnover intention, it would be appropriate for nurse researchers to devote more attention to undertaking studies that will holistically assess this concept. The study therefore, aimed at assessing rate of emotional exhaustion; and also determining the factors that accounts for it among Ghanaian nurses.