Social Workers' Self-Care Practices: Buffering the Influence of Work-Family Interferences on Burnout and Engagement

Health Soc Work. 2022 Jul 13;47(3):195-204. doi: 10.1093/hsw/hlac010.

Abstract

As a reaction to specific job stressors, social workers can experience job burnout. The job demands-resources theory posits that personal characteristics would mediate the influence of job stressors on either burnout or engagement. Within this framework, this cross-sectional research aimed to analyze the relationships between work-family interferences (as predictors), self-care practices (as mediators), and burnout and engagement (as outcomes). The sample included 437 graduate social workers from Spain. Structural equation modeling showed that family-work and work-family conflicts negatively predicted self-care practices and positively predicted burnout. Professional and personal self-care practices positively predicted engagement, negatively predicted burnout, and attenuated the impact of work-family interferences on burnout and engagement. To the authors' knowledge, the present article is the first to test the job demands-resources theory with these variables on social workers. The findings support interventions for social work students and professionals enhancing self-care practices to promote engagement and to reduce burnout, and highlight the need to decrease job stressors and enhance job resources for social workers.

Keywords: burnout; engagement self-care; social workers; work–family conflict.

MeSH terms

  • Burnout, Professional*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Humans
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Self Care
  • Social Workers*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires