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Are we Ignoring a Serious, Preventable, Occupational Health Risk Among Life Scientists in Academia?

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dc.contributor.author Malcolm, McCallum
dc.date.accessioned 2017-11-07T19:40:19Z
dc.date.available 2017-11-07T19:40:19Z
dc.date.issued 2017 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/10315
dc.description.abstract "Academic burnout is an occupational health syndrome with both psychological and physiological symptoms. It manifests as a debilitating and sometimes life-threatening condition when the extremely educated are under excessive social and occupational stress. Recent studies demonstrate that societal and economic changes have induced metamorphosis of the professoriate from a low stress to a high-stress occupation. Our knowledge about the nature and incidence of burnout among professors in the United States comes largely from studies confined to specific institutions, medical schools, and research universities. Publication is probably the most obvious and obtainable signal of reduced research productivity, and it is closely connected with academic burnout. I shed light on the potential incidence of academic burnout in university faculty by examining the productivity of 612 tenured life science faculty members from non-doctoral granting departments at 76 regional state universities and liberal arts colleges distributed among 13 randomly selected states. Anything claimed to be a publication on a faculty member’s CV or webpage, or via a Google Scholar query was accepted. This definition inflated publication counts making unpublished faculty more difficult to identify. Despite this, about 37% of tenured faculty went unpublished from 2008-2012. State jurisdictions averaged from 19% to 52% of faculty without publications. Departments awarding masters degrees had more published faculty than non-masters awarding departments. The large numbers of unpublished faculty during this five year window constitutes a smoking gun suggesting that academic burnout (a.k.a., adrenal exhaustion) may be a widespread problem in American regional state universities and public liberal arts colleges. However, supporting psychological and physiological tests are needed to rule out or support definitively the role of academic burnout in the revealed publication patterns of faculty at these mid-tier schools. Institutions with low faculty publication rates should screen faculty to evaluate the degree to which burnout is present, regardless of teaching load. These results beg to question if immediate need exists for strategic implementation of college-wide, self help programs to reduce the occurrence of stress-related disorders like academic burnout which may threaten the stature of American higher education." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.subject health en_US
dc.subject education en_US
dc.subject.classification occupational health en_US
dc.title Are we Ignoring a Serious, Preventable, Occupational Health Risk Among Life Scientists in Academia? en_US
dc.type Journal Article en_US
dc.type.published published en_US
dc.type.methodology Experimental en_US
dc.publisher.workingpaperseries Langston University en_US
dc.coverage.region North America en_US
dc.subject.sector Social Organization en_US
dc.identifier.citationjournal Life: The Excitement of Biology en_US
dc.identifier.citationvolume 5 en_US
dc.identifier.citationpages 77-114 en_US
dc.identifier.citationnumber 2 en_US
dc.identifier.citationmonth October en_US


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