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Does a vacation help burnout?

But also recognize taking a vacation is an important way to recover from burnout—or avoid it in the first place. Take time away and know that relaxing and rejuvenating will be good for you personally, but also good for your overall performance and satisfaction.



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When you take time away from the stresses of work and daily life, it can improve our physical and mental health, motivation, relationships, job performance and perspective. A vacation can help you feel refreshed and more prepared to handle whatever comes when you return.

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Multiple Vacations Throughout the Year. The results are in, and science says more is the way to go. More frequent trips allow you to take regular breaks from work. Research shows that the ideal length of time for a vacation is between eight and eleven days, with eight days being the true sweet spot.

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Not only are you at risk for burnout, one nine-year long study, published in Psychosomatic Medicine, suggests not taking at least one vacation a year may increase your risk of mortality due to cardiovascular disease. So, not only are you killing your joy, you're possibly killing yourself. Give yourself a break, people.

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The vacation itself has been found to boost our life satisfaction, improve our sense of health, reduce exhaustion, increase our well-being, and reduce burnout. A study of 87 blue-collar industrial workers in Israel found that a 10-day vacation alleviated the workers' feelings of job stress and burnout.

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