Seventy percent of senior executives and supervisors surveyed noted high burnout levels, with 43 percent of them associating burnout with the coronavirus crisis.
The study also found that 41 percent of millennials were more likely to experience burnout due to the pandemic, compared with Gen X survey participants at 26 percent and baby boomers at 19 percent.
Respondents cited workload, lack of communications, support or feedback, limited access to tools and technology, and work-life balance challenges as the top causes of their burnout.
"Federal employees remain under immense pressure – from the COVID-19 pandemic, to a far-reaching data hack, to implementing a presidential transition," said David Witkowski, public service industry lead at Eagle Hill Consulting.
Witkowski added that agency leaders should find ways to manage workload sustainability for staff members.
The Space Development Agency has awarded $3.5 billion in other transaction authority agreements to Lockheed Martin, L3Harris Technologies, Northrop Grumman…
The Defense Health Agency has awarded TriWest Healthcare Alliance $6.8 billion to continue providing healthcare and administrative services in support…