Overview
Fatigue is a subjective state of persistent tiredness, exhaustion, or diminished capacity for physical or mental effort that is not relieved by ordinary rest. It is commonly divided into physical fatigue, marked by reduced muscular performance and endurance, and mental or cognitive fatigue, characterized by impaired concentration, attention, and motivation, with the two frequently coexisting. Fatigue is both a normal physiological response to exertion and sleep loss and a prominent symptom of numerous medical and psychiatric conditions, including depression, chronic disease, and neurological disorders, as well as occupational and psychosocial stress. In caregiving and high-demand professions it manifests as compassion fatigue, eroding wellbeing and quality of life, while in sport and rehabilitation it shapes performance and recovery. Assessment relies on validated scales, and management targets underlying causes, workload, recovery strategies, and support. Research relevant to this area examines compassion fatigue and coping among mental-health providers, physical and mental fatigue with social support and quality of life in social workers, brain fatigue, exercise recovery methods such as cold-water immersion, and fatigue in chronic conditions and rehabilitation. The journal publishes peer-reviewed studies on the causes, measurement, occupational and clinical correlates, and management of physical and mental fatigue across health, workplace, and rehabilitation settings.
Research published in this journal
12 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Brain Fatigue is a Critical Issue
Hip Angle Behavior in Landing After Drop Jump in Children; and their Implicance in Prevention Programs
Ice Water Immersion as an Additional Method in Physiology Recovery in the Sport
Comparison of the Angular Compartment of Hip Flexion Before and After Training in 11 to 12-Year-old Soccer Players.
Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and Narcolepsy: An Incidental Relationship?
Complementary and Alternative Treatments for Cancer Prevention and Cure (Part 1)
A Study on the Feasibility and Utility of Continuous Glucose Monitors in Elite Football
How this research is being cited
The 12 articles above have been cited 23 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2026 · BMC Cancer
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Compassion fatigue, secondary traumatic stress, and coping strategies of mental health professionalsKavya Kumar et al. · 2024 · Industrial Psychiatry Journal
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Alexander Adam Audu et al. · 2024 · Journal of Forensic Science and Medicine
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B. Edet et al. · 2024 · Telangana Journal of Psychiatry
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Compassion fatigue, secondary traumatic stress, and coping strategies of mental health professionals2024 · Industrial Psychiatry Journal
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2024 · Telangana Journal of Psychiatry
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2024 · Journal of Forensic Science and Medicine
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Mahum Justin et al. · 2023 · Academic journal of social sciences
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Fatigue, linking to each citing work.