Detrimental Effects of Burnout among Allied Health Workers: A Mixed Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Suicide Risk, Organizational Liability, and the Preventive Impact of a Hypothetical NeuroPulse Burnout Detection Pilot Program
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47604/jhmn.3790Keywords:
Burnout, Allied Health Workers, Suicide Prevention, Occupational Stress, Workforce Wellness, Organizational Liability, Healthcare Liability, Sentinel Events, Predictive Monitoring, Hypothetical Pilot Technology, NeuroPulseAbstract
Purpose: Burnout among allied health workers represents a growing crisis affecting workforce sustainability, patient safety, employee mental health, and institutional liability. This mixed qualitative and quantitative manuscript evaluates burnout prevalence across professional sectors, examines longitudinal healthcare trends, and models relationships between burnout, suicide risk, sentinel events, and insurance claims.
Methodology: Comparative quantitative modeling indicates healthcare workers experience significantly higher burnout levels than workers in finance, technology, manufacturing, and education sectors. Qualitative case simulations illustrate how early detection may prevent suicide events and costly liability exposure, while also demonstrating how early detection of burnout-related physiological distress may reduce sentinel occurrences and minimize organizational financial loss. The study also evaluates the potential benefits of implementing a wearable neurophysiological detection technology known as the NeuroPulse Burnout Device. This manuscript also introduces the NeuroPulse Burnout Detection System, presented strictly as a hypothetical pilot-stage wellness technology currently under conceptual development and early implementation planning. The purpose of introducing NeuroPulse within this research is to model how emerging predictive physiological monitoring technologies may contribute to burnout prevention strategies.
Findings: Regression modeling demonstrates statistically significant correlations between burnout prevalence and liability risk indicators. Implementation of predictive monitoring systems may reduce sentinel events, improve workforce wellness, enhance organizational resilience, improve workforce resilience, enhance patient safety outcomes, reduce absenteeism, and lower institutional liability exposure. All projected benefits described in this manuscript represent theoretical modeling assumptions, not confirmed clinical outcomes.
Unique Contribution to Theory, Practice and Policy: These findings support further exploration of predictive burnout monitoring pilot programs within healthcare organizations. The manuscript follows JHMN–IPRJB formatting guidelines including structured sections, tables, figures, and references formatted in APA style.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Dr. Ibukun Odutola, AA, AAS, RN, MSN, APRN, PMHNP-BC, CGNC, DNP

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