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One of the benefits of participating in the
Self-Care Academy program is to manage stress and the beginning
stages of compassion fatigue. The goal is to help nurses
become reinvigorated in their role as caregiver.
Addressing Compassion Fatigue
“The problem is not
new, but it requires more urgent attention”
Paul Hofmann, DrPH, FACHE
Healthcare Executive Sept/Oct 2009, Page 40
Compassion fatigue
is a physical and emotional exhaustion that causes a decline
in a person’s ability to feel compassion when taking care of
others. It is the cumulative result of internalizing the
emotions of patients, co-workers, family and friends. It
costs the healthcare industry millions of dollars each year
in stress, burnout and employee turnover.
Compassion fatigue is a result of the
caregiver being focused on providing care to others and NOT
providing care to themselves. This cannot be a one-way
street, especially for healthcare professionals. Too
often healthcare professionals give most of themselves to
others over a long period of time and don’t stop to recharge
their own batteries.
Warning signs related to compassion fatigue:
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physical |
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apathy
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frustration
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hopelessness
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irritability
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poor concentration
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boredom
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anxiety
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depression
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isolation
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tardiness/
absenteeism increasing
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error rate an issue
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more critical of team
members
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record keeping a
challenge
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cynical attitude towards
work
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