Introduction and aims: Youth work specialises in helping vulnerable young people face life challenges during critical stages of their development. It is a complex and demanding role and factors influencing occupational stress in youth workers are rarely investigated. This study examined whether youth alcohol and other drug workers with greater compassion satisfaction, self-care practice and self-care agency experienced different rates of occupational stress including burnout and secondary traumatic stress.
Design and methods: A convenience sample of 258 Australian youth alcohol and other drug workers completed an online questionnaire battery. A four-stage data analysis was conducted utilising multivariate analysis of variance, bivariate correlations, linear multiple regression models and mediation modelling.
Results: Burnout and secondary traumatic stress exhibited moderate negative correlations with compassion satisfaction, self-care practice and the different forms of self-care agency. Further, a decrease in lacking power for self-care, a form of self-care agency, was the strongest contributor to both burnout and secondary traumatic stress. Support was found for a mediation pathway whereby self-care agency led to greater self-care practice, which in turn increased compassion satisfaction, lowering burnout and secondary traumatic stress.
Discussion and conclusions: The findings suggest that it would be beneficial for self-care agency to be a key focus of youth worker training and professional development programs.
Keywords: burnout; compassion fatigue; compassion satisfaction; self-care agency; youth worker.
© 2020 Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs.