%0 Journal Article %T Effort¨CReward Imbalance and Overcommitment at Work: Associations With Police Burnout %A Anna Mnatsakanova %A Desta Fekedulegn %A Ja Kook Gu %A John M. Violanti %A Michael E. Andrew %A Penelope Allison %J Police Quarterly %@ 1552-745X %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1098611118774764 %X The present study examined associations of effort¨Creward imbalance (ERI) and overcommitment at work with burnout among police officers using data from 200 (mean age£¿=£¿46 years, 29% women) officers enrolled in the Buffalo Cardio-Metabolic Occupational Police Stress Study. ERI and overcommitment were assessed using Siegrist¡¯s ¡°effort/reward¡± questionnaire. The Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey was used to assess burnout and its three subscales (exhaustion, cynicism, and professional efficacy). Analysis of covariance was used to examine mean values of burnout scores across quartiles of ERI and overcommitment. Linear regression was used to test for linear trend. ERI and overcommitment were positively and significantly associated with cynicism and exhaustion (trend p value£¿<£¿.001), while professional efficacy showed an inverse association with overcommitment (p£¿=£¿.026). Cynicism and exhaustion scores were significantly higher in officers who reported both overcommitment and ERI compared with their counterparts (p£¿<£¿.001). The results suggest that ERI and overcommitment at work are determinants of higher cynicism and exhaustion. The inverse association of overcommitment with professional efficacy (an indicator of engagement at work) suggests that extreme involvement in work may negatively affect efficacy. Overcommitment may be related to a need for approval and inability of officers to withdraw from work, even in an off-duty status. Police agencies should consider organizational remedies to maintain acceptable levels of commitment by officers. In addition, there is a need to monitor and improve effort¨Creward imbalance experienced by officers %K police %K work effort¨Creward imbalance %K burnout %K overcommitment %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1098611118774764