"Everyone Gets Bored Sometimes: Effects of Boredom and Burnout in a Lon" by Josie Oostindie
 

Student Author(s)

Josie Oostindie, Hope College

Faculty Mentor(s)

Dr. Aaron Franzen, Sociology & Social Work

Document Type

Poster

Event Date

4-11-2025

Abstract

For some time now, medical education research has documented increased levels of undesirable outcomes as a byproduct of professionalization, such as decreased mental health and increased burnout. We introduce to this literature the concept of boredom proneness that taps into students' adaptation to a sense of the flow of time and outline how this affects their health throughout undergraduate. Trait measures of boredom tap into not merely a momentary discomfort with a context or flow of time, but a deeper existential challenge that indicates a possibly socially-induced discordance with a self in time. Additionally, a challenge of past research is it is often cross-sectional, complicating understanding changes over time. This study uses a unique data set that follows three consecutive cohorts of pre health undergraduate students at a small liberal arts college throughout all four years of undergrad (n=532). We use time-ordered structural equation models to show how burnout, mental health, overall health, social support, and a novel measure of boredom proneness change throughout time. We find a high degree of stability in these measures throughout time. Importantly, we find that boredom is a potent predictor of decreased health and is a more potent predictor of worse mental health than the same measure from prior waves. We discuss implications this may have as a background factor influencing other well known challenges to professional collaboration and patient care, such as shifts in empathy, burnout, and humility.

Comments

This research was supported by the Global Health department at Hope College.

Title on poster differs from abstract booklet. Poster title: Everyone Gets Bored Sometimes: A Longitudinal Study on Boredom and Burnout

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