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‘There is life after burnout in academia’

‘There is life after burnout in academia’

Researchers with lived experience of the chronic workplace stress that typifies burnout describe how they sought help and turned their working lives around.

Working Scientist · Nature Publishing Group

January 31, 202527m 22s

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Show Notes

Kelly Korreck tells Adam Levy how a once-loved career in science gradually left her feeling exhausted, upset, and chronically stressed, with accompanying feelings of imposter syndrome.


In 2020 the COVID-19 pandemic deprived Korreck, an astrophysicist then working on NASA's Parker Solar Probe, of the favourite parts of her job. These included face-to-face mentoring, public engagement and conference travel. ”It really took a toll,” she says. ”There was none of the joy that I experienced previously. I thought it was my fault, that I was an imposter. I had gotten to this level, and I just wasn't good enough.”


Desiree Dickerson, a clinical psychologist based in Valencia, Spain, outlines the different stages of burnout, and how the academic culture often encourages researchers to present a ”shiny façade” to the world.


Dickerson, who works with academic institutions to develop healthier and more sustainable approaches to research, outlines three different stages of burnout, and how and when to seek help.


This episode is the fourth in Mind Matters, an eight-part series on mental health and wellbeing in academia.


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