This document summarizes a research article that studied the relationship between emotion work, organizational job stressors, and burnout. The study defined emotion work as the psychological processes required to regulate and display organizationally desired emotions during interactions with clients. It measured different aspects of emotion work, such as displaying positive emotions, displaying and handling negative emotions, sensitivity to clients' emotions, ability to influence clients, and emotional dissonance. The study examined how these emotion work variables related to organizational stressors and resources, their unique contribution to predicting burnout, and potential interaction effects between emotion work and job stressors on burnout. The results provided initial evidence that emotion work is uniquely associated with burnout even when accounting for other job factors.