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@article{2401697, author = {de Beer, Leon T. and Schaufeli, Wilmar B. and de Witte, Hans and Hakanen, Jari J. and Kaltiainen, Janne and Glaser, Jürgen and Seubert, Christian and Shimazu, Akihito and Bosak, Janine and Procházka, Jakub and Kajzar, Aleš and Christensen, Marit}, article_location = {Boston}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1015-5759/a000839}, keywords = {burnout; measurement invariance; equivalence; bifactor exploratory structural equation modeling; occupational depression}, issn = {1015-5759}, journal = {European Journal of Psychological Assessment}, title = {Revisiting a global burnout score with the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT) across nine country samples}, year = {2024} }
TY - JOUR ID - 2401697 AU - de Beer, Leon T. - Schaufeli, Wilmar B. - de Witte, Hans - Hakanen, Jari J. - Kaltiainen, Janne - Glaser, Jürgen - Seubert, Christian - Shimazu, Akihito - Bosak, Janine - Procházka, Jakub - Kajzar, Aleš - Christensen, Marit PY - 2024 TI - Revisiting a global burnout score with the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT) across nine country samples JF - European Journal of Psychological Assessment SP - 1-6 EP - 1-6 PB - Hogrefe Publishing SN - 10155759 KW - burnout KW - measurement invariance KW - equivalence KW - bifactor exploratory structural equation modeling KW - occupational depression N2 - Studies published on the validity of the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT), a novel burnout instrument, have gained traction in the literature over recent years. The BAT has been successfully shown to be equivalent across representative samples when modeled as a second order/higher-order model. However, this specification is not free of criticism and the bifactor approach has been presented as the alternative model specification. Therefore, a study investigating the construct-relevant multidimensionality of the BAT across many representative samples is warranted to reassess a global burnout factor (n = 9,041). We implemented bifactor exploratory structural equation modeling to ascertain the relevance of a global burnout factor and specific component factors (bifactor-ESEM). According to the standardized loadings and McDonald’s ω coefficients, the results showed that the bifactor-ESEM model had a strong global burnout factor with relevant specific factors beyond the global factor. The model also showed measurement invariance across countries and genders. We also present a figure that compares the global burnout mean scores of the countries. All in all, the results of this study reaffirmed that BAT-assessed burnout can be modeled with an equivalent global burnout score across conditions. ER -
DE BEER, Leon T., Wilmar B. SCHAUFELI, Hans DE WITTE, Jari J. HAKANEN, Janne KALTIAINEN, Jürgen GLASER, Christian SEUBERT, Akihito SHIMAZU, Janine BOSAK, Jakub PROCHÁZKA, Aleš KAJZAR a Marit CHRISTENSEN. Revisiting a global burnout score with the Burnout Assessment Tool (BAT) across nine country samples. \textit{European Journal of Psychological Assessment}. Boston: Hogrefe Publishing, 2024, s.~1-6. ISSN~1015-5759. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1015-5759/a000839.
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