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Do Personal Resources Reduce Job Exit and Burnout in Child Welfare Social Workers

Table of Contents. Focus of the presentationDefinition: burnout, resourcesTheories of BurnoutEmpirical literature of effect of burnout on child welfare turnoverBurnout and turnover in Title IV-E graduates. Focus of the Presentation. How does burnout relate to personal resources?Are some person

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Do Personal Resources Reduce Job Exit and Burnout in Child Welfare Social Workers

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    1. Do Personal Resources Reduce Job Exit and Burnout in Child Welfare Social Workers? Sherrill J. Clark, Ph.D Richard Smith, MFA, MSW University of California, Berkeley School of Social Welfare 6701 San Pablo #420 Berkeley, CA 94720

    2. Table of Contents Focus of the presentation Definition: burnout, resources Theories of Burnout Empirical literature of effect of burnout on child welfare turnover Burnout and turnover in Title IV-E graduates

    3. Focus of the Presentation How does burnout relate to personal resources? Are some personal resources protective against burnout? How is burnout related to turnover? Is all burnout pathological?

    4. Definition: Resource Resource Co-ethnic resources

    5. Definition of Burnout “a syndrome of emotional exhaustion and cynicism that occurs frequently among individuals who do ‘people-work’ of some kind” (Maslach & Jackson, 1981, p. 99).

    6. Theories of Burnout Person Environment Fit Job Demands Maslach Burnout Inventory Scale

    7. Person Environment Fit (PE) Stress would occur if mismatch: 1) between the job requirements and worker’s abilities (DA Fit); 2) between supplies in the environment and worker values (SV Fit) (Edwards, 1996).

    8. Job Demands Theory Stress is a result of having a job with the following: high strain low control (Van Der Doef & Maes, 1999).

    9. Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) 22 Questions grouped into three factors (aka subscales): Emotional exhaustion (EMO), Depersonalization (cynicism), Personal accomplishment (self-efficacy).

    10. MBI Scale Maslach used factor analysis to identify these after administering over 11,000 tests to human services professionals broadly defined that included social workers, nurses, teachers, police and others (1981).

    11. MBI Ranges (Guntupalli & Fromm, 1996)

    12. Burnout in Social Work Soderfeldt et. al. (1995) reviewed 18 articles on burnout in social work. Only 10 of the reviewed studies reported scores and only six were comparable. They concluded in contrast to reviewed articles that burnout in social work was low and no cause of alarm. Causes of stress and organizational factors need systematic investigation before recommending policy.

    13. Turnover in Social Work Found that the five largest predictors of turnover are role overload, stress, negative affectivity, and emotional exhaustion and burnout. The five largest predictors of intention to leave: job problems, stress, emotional exhaustion, role overload burnout (Mor Barak et. al. 2001).

    14. Turnover in Child Welfare Zlotnik, et. al’s (2005) presents a concept map of general trends to improve retention that has three broad areas: personal characteristics, such as burnout prevention and being bilingual; organizational factors and improved training (sense of efficacy) through the Title IV-E program.

    15. Influences of Public Child Welfare Worker Turnover Model

    16. Turnover Rates in Child Welfare Zlotnik includes turnover rates from two studies: 32% in Arkansas (2002), 20% in Oklahoma (Rosenthal, et. al.; 1998), and California (2003) reported 9.5% turnover for all counties excluding Los Angeles (CalSWEC, 2004).

    17. CalSWEC Retention Study Study Design Secondary data analysis of data collected using a mailed exit survey collected in voluntary, repeated cross sections. Participants 765 Title IV-E MSWs from 1993- 2005.

    18. CalSWEC Retention Study Procedures Within one year of completing payback, CalSWEC mailed a survey with two follow up mailings to 1496 eligible graduates yielding a response rate of 51%. Non-responders had no observed significant differences except greater than expected proportion of African-Americans and Leavers.

    19. CalSWEC Retention Study Measures MBI (Imputed) Controls for age, race, gender, partnership status. Salary, year, region, school considered as controls but dropped for parsimony.

    20. CalSWEC Retention Study Data Analysis Do these IV-E graduates report burnout after two years? What are the relative risks (or differences in odds) of job exit for different racial and ethnic groups?

    25. Effect of Burnout Subscales on Job Exit (N = 717)

    26. Multiple Comparisons Controlling for level of burnout, age, gender, partnership status… Native Americans have 1.5 to 2.7 times the risk of leaving than whites, Hispanics, Asian-Americans and Blacks. Hispanics have 1.8 times the risk of leaving as Blacks. Those who identify as multiracial or other race have two times the odds of leaving as Blacks.

    27. Conclusions Unlike Missouri social workers, these IV-E graduates have a greater effect on job exit through depersonalization. No significant effect for partnership status, gender or being experienced. Black and Asian social workers as likely to stay as whites--a possible success of the program. Are mixed race and other race workers deprived of coethnic resources?

    28. Conclusion Possible challenges due to working with Limited English Proficiency clients or applying the Indian Child Welfare Act. Need to examine qualitative data to determine Hispanics and Native Americans appear to be more at risk of leaving child welfare than other groups. The CalSWEC retention data set also contains information about the work environment, supervisor support and workload for further research.

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