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Renzo Bianchi

Researcher at University of Neuchâtel

Publications -  130
Citations -  3147

Renzo Bianchi is an academic researcher from University of Neuchâtel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Burnout & Occupational stress. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 119 publications receiving 2152 citations. Previous affiliations of Renzo Bianchi include University of Franche-Comté & City University of New York.

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Is burnout separable from depression in cluster analysis? A longitudinal study

TL;DR: Emotional exhaustion and depersonalization, the two main dimensions of burnout, may be better conceptualized as depressive responses to adverse occupational environments than as components of a separate entity.
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Is burnout solely job-related? A critical comment.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the field-dominating, multidimensional theory of burnout should abandon as groundless the idea that burnout is a specifically job-related phenomenon and define burnout as a multi-domain syndrome to allow both finer analysis and wider synthesis in research on chronic stress and burnout.
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Burnout: Moving beyond the status quo.

TL;DR: Past analyses of burnout are reviewed by reviewing key, yet overlooked, problems affecting the construct, showing that burnout research is undermined by 4 main problems and appears to not well serve the goal of promoting occupational health.
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Effects of stress and mental toughness on burnout and depressive symptoms: A prospective study with young elite athletes

TL;DR: Both cross-sectional and prospective analyses showed that compared to participants with low mental toughness, those with higher mental toughness scores reported significantly fewer mental health issues, when exposed to high stress.
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Harmonized definition of occupational burnout: A systematic review, semantic analysis, and Delphi consensus in 29 countries

TL;DR: This study resulted in a harmonized definition of occupational burnout approved by experts from 29 countries within OMEGA-NET and should address the reproducibility of the Delphi consensus in a larger panel of experts, representing more countries, and examine the practicability of the definition.