
Burnout is often framed as an individual resilience problem. In reality, burnout is a predictable outcome of system-level preparedness failures.
When healthcare workers are asked to function without adequate staffing, training, rest, or support, exhaustion is inevitable. Burnout reduces situational awareness, increases errors, and weakens response capacity during prolonged emergencies.
Preparedness must include:
- Reasonable work-rest cycles
- Psychological safety
- Leadership visibility
- Clear expectations during crises
Resilient systems do not rely on heroics. They rely on sustainability. Treating burnout as a personal failure distracts from the structural changes preparedness demands.
Preparedness that ignores workforce well-being undermines patient safety.
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