BurnoutResearch, explained

Burnout Among Health Workers After COVID's First Wave

Jillian SchaferReviewed by Jillian Schafer··4 min read
Health care worker burnout after the first wave of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Japan
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The short version

A study in Japan found that 22.6%, roughly one in five, of health care workers experienced burnout after the pandemic's first wave. The research also aimed to shed light on ways of coping, though those specifics weren't available. The figure is a reminder that sustained high-stakes pressure takes a measurable toll.

During the early days of the pandemic, health care workers carried an extraordinary load — long shifts, high stakes, and constant uncertainty. A study in Japan looked at what that took out of them once the first wave had passed, measuring how many were experiencing burnout and what might help them cope.

What the researchers wanted to know

Burnout among health care workers isn't just a personal hardship; it affects the quality and safety of the care everyone receives. After the first wave of COVID-19, researchers in Japan wanted to understand how widespread burnout had become among these frontline workers and to shed light on the factors surrounding it. The goal was to get a clearer read on the emotional aftermath of an intensely demanding period for the people who staff hospitals and clinics.

How they studied it

Based on the summary available to us, the study focused on health care workers in Japan and assessed burnout following the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic. Research of this kind typically surveys staff about their experiences of exhaustion and stress to estimate how common burnout is and to explore what's connected to it.

We want to be honest about the limits of what we can see: the fuller methodological details of this study weren't available to us beyond its central focus and one key figure. So rather than invent specifics, we'll report the number the summary provides and describe the study's aim, while being clear about where our knowledge stops.

What they found

The figure that stands out is this: according to the summary, 22.6% of health care workers experienced burnout after the first wave of COVID-19. In other words, roughly one in five of these workers were showing signs of burnout in the aftermath of that initial surge.

Roughly one in five health care workers showed signs of burnout after the first COVID wave — a reminder that sustained pressure leaves a real mark, not a personal failing.

The summary also indicated that the study pointed toward ways of coping — that beyond documenting the problem, there was attention to what might help workers manage. We'll refrain from listing specific coping strategies as findings of this study, since those details weren't provided to us. But the framing itself is meaningful: the research wasn't only counting burnout, it was oriented toward the question of how to support the people experiencing it.

What this means for you

Even if you don't work in health care, there's something worth taking from this. A figure like roughly one in five experiencing burnout after an acute period of stress is a reminder that when demands spike and stay high, exhaustion follows for a meaningful share of people. That's not a personal failing — it's a predictable human response to sustained pressure.

If you've been through your own demanding stretch — a crisis at work, a caregiving season, a period of relentless pressure — it's reasonable to expect an emotional toll and to plan for recovery rather than pushing straight through. Building in real rest, protecting boundaries where you can, and leaning on supportive routines are sensible responses. Small daily practices that help you decompress — a few quiet minutes, reflection, or a grounding affirmation — can be part of how you tend to yourself during and after intense periods. And if burnout runs deep, reaching out for support is a sign of good judgment, not weakness.

The honest caveats

The clearest limitation is one we've flagged directly: our view of this study was limited to its central focus and the single burnout figure of 22.6%. We've deliberately avoided reporting specific coping strategies, methods, or additional findings that weren't provided to us, so please don't read anything above as a detailed result beyond that one statistic.

More broadly, a study like this captures a specific group at a specific moment — health care workers in Japan after the first wave of the pandemic. The burnout rate and the factors involved could differ in other countries, other professions, other phases of the pandemic, or other kinds of stressful events. Snapshots of prevalence tell you how common something was in one setting, not a universal rate.

Burnout is also a serious condition that sits at the crossroads of work and health. Personal coping strategies and self-care matter, but they're not a substitute for structural support in demanding workplaces or for professional help when exhaustion becomes overwhelming. Consider this research a sobering, useful data point — evidence that intense periods leave a real mark on frontline workers — and a nudge to take recovery seriously, both for yourself and for the people doing hard jobs around you.

Key takeaways
  • In this Japanese study, 22.6% of health care workers — about one in five — experienced burnout after the pandemic's first wave.
  • The research was oriented toward coping and support, not just counting the problem, though we can't report its specific strategies.
  • We've reported only the single burnout figure and the study's focus, since fuller details weren't available to us.

Frequently asked questions

How many health care workers experienced burnout after COVID's first wave?

According to the summary, 22.6% of health care workers experienced burnout after the first wave, roughly one in five showing signs of burnout in the aftermath of that initial surge. The study focused on frontline workers in Japan.

Did the study identify ways to cope with burnout?

The summary indicated the study pointed toward ways of coping, showing it wasn't only counting burnout but was oriented toward how to support the people experiencing it. However, the specific coping strategies weren't provided, so the article deliberately avoids listing any as findings of this research.

Can this burnout rate be applied everywhere?

No. A study like this captures a specific group at a specific moment, health care workers in Japan after the first wave. The burnout rate and the factors involved could differ in other countries, professions, phases of the pandemic, or other stressful events. A prevalence figure tells you how common something was in one setting, not a universal rate.

The original study

Health care worker burnout after the first wave of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Japan

Read the full study

This is a plain-English summary reviewed by Jillian Schafer. It is educational, not medical advice.

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