KEY POINTS
  • For the first time, the World Health Organization classifies workplace burnout as an occupational phenomenon.
  • The WHO says it is a syndrome resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed.
  • Burnout is not classified as a medical condition.

If you often feel exhausted or mentally distant at work, the World Health Organization may have a diagnosis for you: Burnout.

For the first time, the WHO has officially classified workplace burnout as an occupational phenomenon in its latest revision of the International Classification of Diseases. The agency previously defined burnout as a "state of vital exhaustion," but this is the first time it's being directly linked in its classification of diseases as a work hazard.