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Médecine du travail du personnel hospitalier

Compassion fatigue and nursing work: can we accurately capture the consequences of caring work?

Int J Nurs Pract. 2006 Jun;12(3):136-42.
Compassion fatigue and nursing work: can we accurately capture the consequences of caring work?
‘Sabo BM.
School of Nursing, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. brenda.sabo@sdha.nshealth.ca’

Health outcomes and, in particular, patient health outcomes have become a driving force within health-care delivery. Little emphasis has been placed on the potential health consequences for nurses providing care and caring within the health-care system. Compassion fatigue (or secondary traumatic stress) has emerged as a natural consequence of caring for clients who are in pain, suffering or traumatized. This paper sheds light on how nursing work might impact the health of nurses by exploring the concept of compassion fatigue. Limitations of current instruments to measure compassion fatigue are highlighted, and suggestions for future direction are presented.
MeSH Terms: Adaptation, Psychological – Burnout, Professional/diagnosis – Burnout, Professional/etiology – Burnout, Professional/prevention & control – Burnout, Professional/psychology* – Cost of Illness – Empathy* – Health Status – Helping Behavior – Hum
Publication Types: Review

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