Mediation Analysis for Burnout Among Ukrainian Military Personnel

Esmeilyn Jimenez Tejada

Co-Presenters: Individual Presentation

College: Hennings College of Science Mathematics and Technology

Major: BA.MATH/STATS

Faculty Research Mentor: Beaugris, Louis  

Abstract:

Studies of war veterans estimated that 95% of military members consider burnout to be the leading cause of separation, retirement, and interpersonal disorders. Burnout, defined as a syndrome of emotional exhaustion and feelings of workplace failure that occurs in response to chronic exposure to occupational stressors, if not attended to and properly addressed, can trigger, or induce emotional disorders, feeling of discouragement, frustrations, worthlessness, and depression among servicemen. The current project involves researchers from the University of Iowa and investigators in the Psychology Department at Tara Shevchenko University in Kiev, Ukraine. The data were gathered on Ukraine’s servicemen at the frontline of the Russian-Ukraine war (n = 400). Burnout Assessment Tools (BAT), Interpersonal Guilt Rating Scale Self Report (IGRS-SR), Basic Psychological Need Satisfaction and Frustration Scale measurements (BPNSFS), will be cross-studied as functions of servicemen socio-demographic characteristics such as: gender, age, education, marital status, number of children, combat operation and other characteristics. Specific hypotheses will be studied and tested, and recommendations will be made with direct policy implications regarding burnouts among frontline servicemen.

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