COVID-19 pandemic impact on funeral service workers’ work-related mental health.

Publication date: Dec 26, 2024

COVID-19 may pose a mental health risk to funeral service workers (FSWs). In this cross-sectional survey, 278 Dutch FSWs were assessed three months after the acute phase of the pandemic ended. The FSWs reported on burnout symptoms (BAT-12), work engagement (UWES-9), wellbeing (MHC-SF) mental health indicators, and retrospectively on work stress and perceived support during the acute phase of the pandemic. Data-analyses included descriptive statistics and linear regression. Mental health scores were compared with norm scores. Almost all FSWs reported “average-to-high” levels of wellbeing (93%, n = 223) and work engagement (99%, n = 275), and rarely (3%, n = 7) “high” levels of burnout symptoms. However, a third (33%, n = 81) expressed a need for support. Higher levels of work stress and lower levels of perceived support were significantly associated with poorer current mental health. FSWs appear mentally healthy and may provide worthwhile insights into pandemic resilience.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Acute
Dutch Burnout
Funeral Covid
Months Engagement
Wellbeing Fsws
Funeral
Health
Mental
Pandemic
Phase
Reported
Stress
Symptoms
Wellbeing
Workers

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH burnout
disease MESH work stress

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