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Stress & Burnout — Fast Diagnosis & Same Day Support Stress & Burnout — Online GP Consultation

Stress & Burnout

Chronic stress, exhaustion or complete burnout getting you down? Our GPs diagnose your condition, prescribe the right treatment & help you rebuild your health. Book now — seen in minutes.

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Stress & Burnout — Fast Diagnosis & Same Day Support

Stress is the most common work-related health condition in the United Kingdom, and burnout, its most severe consequence, is now officially recognised by the World Health Organisation as a serious occupational phenomenon that requires medical attention. Together they account for more than half of all working days lost to ill health in the UK every single year — yet the vast majority of people experiencing chronic stress and burnout never speak to a doctor about it.

There is a widespread and deeply damaging belief that stress is simply part of modern life — something to be pushed through, managed privately, or dismissed as a sign of weakness. The reality is very different. Chronic stress triggers measurable physical changes in the body, including elevated cortisol, disrupted sleep, impaired immune function, and cardiovascular strain that — left unaddressed — can cause serious and lasting damage to your long-term health.

Our online GPs are here to help you recognise when stress has crossed the line into a medical problem — and to give you the right tools, treatment, and support to recover properly.

What Are the Symptoms of Stress & Burnout?

Stress and burnout affect every aspect of a person’s health simultaneously. The symptoms our GPs most commonly see include:

Psychological Symptoms:

  • Constant feeling of overwhelm — a sense that demands consistently exceed your ability to cope
  • Inability to switch off — work thoughts, worries, and to-do lists that follow you home and into bed
  • Emotional exhaustion — feeling completely drained, empty, and detached from everything around you
  • Cynicism and detachment — losing care and connection for work, relationships, and things that once mattered
  • Reduced sense of achievement — nothing feels good enough, finished, or worth the effort
  • Irritability and short temper — disproportionate reactions to small frustrations or minor setbacks
  • Anxiety and low mood — persistent worry, dread, or a creeping sense of hopelessness
  • Difficulty concentrating — brain fog, forgetfulness, and an inability to think clearly or make decisions

Physical Symptoms:

  • Chronic fatigue — exhaustion that does not improve with rest or time off work
  • Frequent illness — a weakened immune system leading to repeated colds, infections, and slow recovery
  • Insomnia or disrupted sleep — difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking unrefreshed
  • Tension headaches — persistent pressure across the forehead, temples, or back of the neck
  • Muscle tension and pain — tightness across the shoulders, jaw, and upper back that never fully releases
  • Digestive problems — nausea, stomach cramps, irritable bowel, or loss of appetite
  • Heart palpitations — a racing, fluttering, or pounding heartbeat triggered by stress responses
  • High blood pressure — chronically elevated blood pressure as a direct physical consequence of prolonged stress

Stress vs Burnout — What Is the Difference?

Understanding whether you are experiencing stress or burnout is important because the treatment approach differs significantly:

Stress is characterised by too many demands, too many pressures, too many responsibilities competing for your attention at the same time. Stress typically feels urgent and overwhelming, but still involves some emotional engagement with the challenges you are facing. In most cases, removing or reducing the source of stress leads to relatively rapid recovery.

Burnout is characterised by too little — a state of complete physical, emotional, and mental depletion caused by prolonged, unresolved stress. Unlike acute stress, burnout produces a profound sense of emptiness, detachment, and disillusionment. People experiencing burnout often describe feeling completely hollow — going through the motions of daily life without any sense of purpose, energy, or connection. Recovery from burnout is considerably slower than recovery from stress and almost always requires professional support.

Burnout Warning Signs If you recognise three or more of the following, you may be experiencing burnout rather than stress:

  • Dreading every single working day, regardless of workload
  • Feeling emotionally numb or indifferent to things that should matter
  • Struggling to get out of bed even after a full night of sleep
  • Making frequent errors at work that are out of character for you
  • Completely withdrawing from colleagues, friends, and family
  • Physical symptoms that appear on working days and ease at weekends

Common Causes of Chronic Stress & Burnout in the UK

Our GPs identify the following as the most frequent underlying drivers of stress and burnout in the UK today:

Work-Related Pressure Excessive workload, unrealistic deadlines, poor management, lack of autonomy, job insecurity, and always-on digital culture are the most significant contributors to workplace stress and burnout across the UK — affecting an estimated 17 million workers every year.

Financial Stress The ongoing cost of living crisis has dramatically increased financial stress across the UK, with debt, housing costs, energy bills, and food prices creating a persistent background of anxiety that never fully switches off and that significantly compounds workplace stress.

Caring Responsibilities Balancing demanding work with caring for children, elderly parents, or family members with health conditions is one of the most common and least acknowledged causes of chronic stress in the UK — particularly among women aged 35 to 55.

Relationship and Family Difficulties Relationship breakdown, divorce, bereavement, loneliness, and family conflict are all significant stressors that — when combined with workplace demands — can push the body and mind toward burnout far more rapidly.

When Should You See a GP for Stress & Burnout?

You should book an online GP appointment if:

  • Stress has lasted longer than 4 weeks with no sign of improvement
  • You are experiencing physical symptoms including chest pain, palpitations, or persistent headaches
  • Stress is affecting your ability to work, sleep, or maintain relationships
  • You have started using alcohol, medication, or other substances to cope
  • You feel emotionally numb, detached, or hollow rather than simply tired
  • Stress is accompanied by a persistent low mood or anxiety
  • You are having thoughts of self-harm — please seek help immediately
  • You need a fit note to take time off work to recover

How Our Online GPs Treat Stress & Burnout

Our doctors understand that stress and burnout require a whole-person approach — not simply a prescription and a follow-up appointment. After a thorough and compassionate assessment, your GP may:

✓ Issue a fit note allowing you to take the time off work your body genuinely needs to recover

✓ Prescribe medication to manage associated anxiety, depression, insomnia, or physical symptoms

✓ Refer you to NHS talking therapies, including Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and stress management programmes

✓ Review current medications that may be contributing to fatigue, sleep disruption, or mood changes

✓ Provide practical guidance on sleep hygiene, boundary setting, and evidence-based stress reduction techniques

✓ Recommend structured exercise, mindfulness, and dietary changes that directly reduce cortisol levels

✓ Create a personalised recovery plan with structured follow-up to monitor your progress over time.

Book Your Stress & Burnout Consultation Today

Stress and burnout cost the UK economy an estimated £28 billion every year in lost productivity, sickness absence, and staff turnover — yet the average person waits over a year before seeking professional help for work-related stress. Your health cannot afford that wait. Our online GPs are available 7 days a week — no waiting room, no judgement, just fast, expert care from wherever you are.

References

NHS England — Depression in Adults Published: October 2023 | Last Reviewed: October 2023

NICE Guidelines CG90 — Depression in Adults Published: October 2009 | Last Updated: June 2022

NHS England — Postnatal Depression Published: February 2023 | Last Reviewed: February 2023

NHS England — Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) Published: October 2023 | Last Reviewed: October 2023

Knowledge Summary — Depression Published: 2023 | Last Reviewed: 2023

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