Key to Beating Burnout: Prioritizing Self-Care

Image of Key to Beating Burnout: Prioritizing Self-Care. Key to Beating Burnout: Prioritizing Self-Care

Many service members work in high stress high intensity environments. The demands of the mission and challenges posed by military life can lead to a risk of burnout for even the strongest among us.

"No one is immune to burnout," said U.S. Air Force Reserve psychologist Lt. Col. Jennifer Gillette.

What is Burnout?

Gillette, who supports the director of psychological health at the Air Force Medical Readiness Agency, says common symptoms of burnout include:

  • Fatigue
  • Headaches
  • Muscle tension
  • Stomach distress
  • Poor sleep
  • Over-eating
  • Heavy drinking

Lesser-known symptoms involve emotional disconnection, insensitivity, sarcasm, and cynicism, leading to a lack of empathy or feelings of incompetence.

U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Daniel Gross, flight commander at the 633rd Medical Group at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, in Hampton, Virginia, says burnout is "a syndrome that results in response to running out of energy and emptying the tank." Burnout occurs when an individual has an imbalance between "responsibility and task compared to the opportunity to rest and recharge".

Service members face a higher risk of burnout when individual or unit "op-tempo" intensifies. Nancy Skopp, a clinical psychologist at the Defense Health Agency Psychological Health Center of Excellence, said "When a person begins to notice fatigue, physical and mental exhaustion, poor motivation, and emotional withdrawal, these are signs to seek guidance from a mentor or mental health professional."

Diagnosing burnout involves identifying reduced stress tolerance, increased irritability, decreased job performance, or relationship stress resulting from exhaustion.

Battling Burnout

"We must take care of ourselves if we want to prevent burnout. We can’t expect our cars to keep running if we don’t fill them up with gas and take them in for regular maintenance,” said Gillette. “If we just keep driving without taking care of our cars or ourselves, we will find ourselves broken down on the side of the road calling for help”.

Self-care tips include:

  • Eating well
  • Prioritizing time for relaxation and fun
  • Exercising regularly
  • Developing good sleep habits
  • Establishing strong work-life boundaries
  • Separating work and personal life
  • Nurturing a sense of humor
  • Building strong relationships with co-workers
  • Recognizing distress signs and seeking help

If you or someone you care about experiences burnout, talk to your doctor or a trusted individual for assistance.

According to U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Catherine Callendar, deputy director of psychological health for the U.S. Air Force, “We want to make sure we’re looking for social support. This may sound simple, but the reality is, there’s so much research that tells us when we talk to somebody who is supportive of us, there are positive neurochemical changes that take place in the brain.”

Gillette says one key to prevention is self-awareness. “Practicing mindfulness can help us learn to tune into ourselves more, takes us off autopilot, and become more aware of the present moment.”

Gillette characterizes positive coping strategies as a “psychological first aid kit.” They offer reminders to use positive coping mechanisms, like calling a friend who makes you laugh, going for a run, or listening to motivational speakers.

"And we really do feel better for very tangible reasons. So, seeking social support, and talking to friends, and family can prove very beneficial to us."

All service members, especially health care providers, must take time to support their colleagues and seek support when necessary.

Resources

You also may be interested in...

Article
May 24, 2023

5 Tips To Start a Conversation About Getting Mental Health Care

“How are you?” It’s a question almost everyone answers every day. Like most, your usual response is probably, “Fine, thanks. How are you?” But if you really think about it, are you fine? Maybe you haven’t been yourself in a while. You’re feeling sad, stressed, lonely, or just not how you want to feel. You’d like to start feeling better but aren’t ...

Fact Sheet
May 22, 2023

Changes in Behavior, Personality or Mood Following Concussion/mTBI Fact Sheet

.PDF | 977.73 KB

This TBICoE fact sheet can be used by health care providers to educate patients with a concussion, or mild TBI, on how to manage changes in mood related to their injury. Patients and caregivers would also find this information useful.

Article
May 17, 2023

Targeted Care Pilot Aims to Match Demand for Mental Health Care

The DHA Targeted Care Pilot deployed to 10 sites in April 2023. The pilot, lasting six months, aims to alleviate the strained mental health system by matching service members to the care they need—wherever they are on a spectrum of mental health issues. Following the pilot, DHA will review results for the purpose of further refinement, continuation, ...

Video
Apr 27, 2023

A Healthy Mind is a Healthy Body

Video thumbnail

DHA Senior Enlisted Leader Chief Tanya Johnson talks about the importance of defending your mental health. For more information on DHA mental health resources, please visit www.health.mil/mentalhealth

Video
Apr 26, 2023

The Brandon Act

The Brandon Act

Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Gilbert R. Cisneros Jr. signed a policy on May 5, 2023, to initiate implementation of the Brandon Act to improve the process for service members to seek mental health support. Teri and Patrick Caserta discuss the importance of supporting service members who seek mental health assistance and ...

Article
Apr 17, 2023

Concussion Protocols Aid Diagnosis, Treatment, and Recovery

Whether on the sport field or the battlefield, the Defense Health Agency is the global leader in research on the effects of concussion—known as mild traumatic brain injury—in the military. Its research has fueled the development of protocols to help providers assess and treat concussion from initial injury to acute and post-acute medical settings, ...

Video
Jan 31, 2023

inTransition - Connecting, Coaching, Empowering

inTransition

The Defense Health Agency inTransition program is a free, confidential program that offers specialized coaching and assistance for active-duty service members, National Guard members, reservists, veterans and retirees who need access to mental health care when: relocating to another assignment; returning from deployment; transitioning from active duty ...

Article
Oct 13, 2022

Destigmatizing Mental Health Counseling and Treatment in Relation to National Security Clearances

Mental health infographic

A new specialty adjudicative branch of the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency Consolidated Adjudications Service focusing in behavioral science is expediting security clearance adjudications, as the agency continues its campaign to destigmatize mental health counseling and treatment in relation to the adjudication of national security ...

Article
Sep 27, 2022

Suicide Prevention Draws Awareness at Madigan

Command Sgt. Maj. Albert Harris speaking at Madigan Army Medical Center

The numbers shock and offend the senses – roughly one active duty service member ends their life each day; add in Reserve and National Guard components and the number rises to an average of 1.5 per day. Madigan Army Medical Center’s Department of Behavioral Health hosted a National Suicide Prevention and Awareness Month event on September 22, to raise ...

Refine your search