Battling Compassion Burnout Begins Within the Mind Bea A. Pasamba, Department of Nursing, California State University, Bakersfield Med/Surg (Theory) NURS 2130-01 Professor Krystal J. Ball MSN/ED, RN, CCRN-K March 3, 2024. Battling Compassion Burnout Begins Within the Mind: Nurses’ overall physical and mental health is greatly affected by the unrealistic workloads and expectations set on them. Consequently, this toll leads to compassion burnout and lower quality of care for patients. Compassion…
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The primary cause of compassion fatigue is exposure to trauma, however other factors play a vital role in health care providers developing this condition. Among these factors are working hours, experience, and innovations in medical science/technology. It is no secret that doctors work long hours, with medical residents regularly working 80 to100 hours a week until 2003 when the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACCGME) “capped the work-week at 80 hours” (Colin Dwyer). Aside…
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Running head: FIGHTING COMPASSION FATIGUE Fighting Compassion Fatigue Mary Ann Jones Grand Canyon University Foundations of Spirituality in Healthcare HLT 310v Marie Armbruster December 15, 2012 Fighting Compassion Fatigue Healthcare providers are one of the highest at risk for compassion fatigue, also referred to as vicarious trauma, secondary traumatic stress, second hand shock and secondary stress reaction (ABA, 2011). It often occurs when one gives too much of them self to others and…
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Improving the Work Environment to Create a Better Atmosphere and Improve Turnout Rate and Compassion Fatigue This paper addresses the problem of nurse burnout, compassion fatigue, and turnover rates in a labor and delivery unit. This paper includes a problem statement, a critical appraisal of five research studies, a PICO statement, and recommendations for evidence-based practice. First, is the problem statement which identifies the workplace setting and patient populations that are impacted by the…
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assessed a need for training on a person level based on the “compassion fatigue” and “sadness [and] despair” that individual nurses experienced. Finally, the hospital assessed a need for training on a task level by identifying that the nurses “failed to deliver quality care, when they fail to notice or correctly interpret patient’s needs.” The nurses were not adequately fulfilling their required tasks. Overall, the problem of “compassion fatigue” required training because of the problems it caused on…
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Journal Week 12: Nurse Compassion Fatigue vs. Nurse Burnout May is the nurse manager on the metabolic unit. She has obtained her BSN degree from Saint Mary’s College and is currently enrolled in graduate school for her public health nurse administrator degree. I asked May questions in regards to possible leadership and management issues that she personally faced on the detox/metabolic unit. She stated that a nurse who she went to school with six years ago had one occurrence report that pushed her…
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Compassion Fatigue Name Grand Canyon University: HLT 310 Date Combatting Compassion Fatigue For this assignment, the syllabus says to “Read the articles listed in the readings for this module and use them as a starting point for researching the topic of compassion fatigue, caregiver burnout, and related issues”. You will need a total of three (3) scholarly, peer reviewed journal articles from the GCU library as reference supports for this paper. You can use ONE of the list reading articles for…
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Intense exposure to work stress factors negatively impacts on the psychological well-being of nurses. The most commonly reported consequence of occupational stress are compassion fatigue and burnout. Compassion Fatigue (CF), also known as vicarious traumatisation, is the physical/emotional state of distress experienced from the performance of care over patients suffering from pain, resulting to physical, emotional and spiritual exhaustion, cynicism and a low sense of personal accomplishment. CF is…
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response to traumatic stress later in life. Whatever the cause, we’ve found that once a caregiver contracts the negative symptoms of compassion fatigue, they won’t fully resolve until distorted beliefs about self and the world are addressed. This is especially true for the ways in which we supervise and motivate ourselves. Caregivers recovering from compassion fatigue will need to soften their critical and coercive self-talk and shift toward a more self-accepting and affirming language and tone. For…
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exposed to the traumatized or suffering person rather than the traumatic event (Sabo, 2006). CF is a secondary traumatic stress reaction resulting from helping, or desiring to help a suffering person from traumatic events. Hence using the PROQOL, Compassion fatigue (CF) is also referred to as secondary traumatic stress (STS) and they are used interchangeably. According to Stamm (2005), secondary exposure to extremely stressful events as a result of your work, for instance, by repeatedly hearing stories…
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