Burnout and Personality Among Youth Care Workers in Wilderness and Residential Settings

Authors

  • Victor L. Savicki Psychology Department, Western Oregon University
  • Kristin Savicki University of Texas at Austin

Abstract

Demands placed on youth care workers in a wilderness therapy setting appear to be substantially different from those in a tyypical residential treatment facility. The current study describes and tests for such differences, tests whether workers may self-select for the distinct settings on the basis of personality characteristics, and then tests whether differences in personality and work environment are related to burnout. Significant differences are discussed in light of qualitative data gathered in interviews with workers drawn from both settings under study, and implications for the field are outlined. Burnout and Personality among Youth Care Workers in Wilderness and Residential Settings

Downloads

Published

2002-03-01

How to Cite

Savicki, V. L., & Savicki, K. (2002). Burnout and Personality Among Youth Care Workers in Wilderness and Residential Settings. Journal of Child and Youth Care Work, 17, 187–203. Retrieved from https://acycpjournal.pitt.edu/ojs/jcycw/article/view/335

Issue

Section

Contributions to Research