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Table 1.

Socio-demographic features of respondents.

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Table 1 Expand

Table 2.

The Oldenburg Burnout Inventory items per subscale.

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Table 2 Expand

Fig 1.

OLBI subscales, mean scores.

The thick vertical bars represent the bootstrapped 95% confidence interval for the mean (1,000 resamplings), and the thin vertical bars represent one standard deviation in the observed data.

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Fig 1 Expand

Fig 2.

Impairments and burnout.

Panels A and B report, respectively, the mean scores for the exhaustion and disengagement subscales for respondents who do and do not declare experiencing the named impairment. Panels C and D report, respectively, the mean scores for the exhaustion and disengagement subscales per the cumulative number of impairments declared by respondents. The number of declared impairments ranges from 1 to 8; because only one respondent declared seven and one respondent declared eight impairments, they are merged with respondents who declared six or more impairments. Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings.

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Fig 2 Expand

Fig 3.

Sociodemographics and burnout.

Panels on the left side (A, C, E, G) report the exhaustion subscale mean score for, respectively, gender, age, ethnicity, and religion. Panels on the right side (B, D, F, H) report the disengagement subscale mean score for, respectively, gender, age, ethnicity, and religion. Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings.

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Fig 3 Expand

Fig 4.

Social class and burnout.

Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings.

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Fig 4 Expand

Fig 5.

Place of activism and burnout.

Paid and unpaid activism of a same type are combined. Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings.

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Fig 5 Expand

Fig 6.

Voluntary vs paid activism and burnout.

In Panels A and B, all forms of paid activism are combined as “paid activism”, all forms of unpaid activism are combined as “unpaid activism” and, for each instance, mean levels of disengagement and exhaustion are calculated. “Paid” and “unpaid” are, therefore, not mutually exclusive and the same respondent could be both groups. In Panels C and D, respondents are grouped in mutually exclusive “paid only”, “unpaid only”, and “paid and unpaid” activism. Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings.

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Fig 6 Expand

Table 3.

Predictors of disengagement.

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Table 3 Expand

Table 4.

Predictors of exhaustion.

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Table 4 Expand

Fig 7.

Burnout measured using OLBI by self-assessed burnout.

Panels A and B show the average levels of disengagement and exhaustion by the four-point self-assessment of burnout. Vertical bars indicate the 95% bootstrapped confidence interval for the means based on 1,000 resamplings. Panels C and D display boxplots for the distribution of disengagement and exhaustion scores by the four-point self-assessment of burnout; the polyserial correlation for the OLBI subscales and the four-point burnout assessment is shown in the top-left corner of their respective panels.

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Fig 7 Expand

Table 5.

Multiple choice causes of burnout.

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Table 5 Expand