Burnout in Social Work: A Review of the Literature within the Context of COVID-19.

Publication date: Jan 02, 2025

Burnout in social work is a long-standing professional issue. Social workers work tirelessly to provide empathetic care to clients and communities. However, stressful work conditions can contribute to burnout, vicarious trauma, and compassion fatigue. While burnout has been studied extensively within social work practice, new data is emerging about COVID-19’s unique impact on burnout among social workers. This review first discusses general factors that contribute to social workers’ experiences of burnout, and then explores how issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated burnout for social workers. COVID-19 also provided a learning opportunity for how burnout can be mitigated. The review concludes with a call to action for next steps in both research and policy pertaining to social work and burnout.

Concepts Keywords
Compassion Burnout
Covid Burnout, Professional
Professional Compassion Fatigue
Stressful COVID-19
COVID-19
Humans
Pandemics
SARS-CoV-2
Social Work
Social work
Social Workers

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Burnout
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH vicarious trauma
disease MESH Burnout Professional

Original Article

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