Aim: Organ and Tissue Donation Coordinators (OTDCs) are healthcare professionals who manage deceased organ donation cases. This study investigated the experiences and perceptions of OTDCs, pertaining to compassion fatigue, burnout, and resilience as it relates to their daily work.
Methodology: A qualitative descriptive study was undertaken using semi-structured interviews conducted with a convenience sample of OTDCs.
Setting: A Canadian Organ Donation Organization.
Findings: Seven out of the ten OTDCs contacted participated in this study. Coordinators all agreed that they work in a high-pressure and demanding environment and the constant exposure to work-related stress and grief has resulted in the majority of them experiencing signs and symptoms of burnout and compassion fatigue occurring throughout their career. Participants described that the emotional toll of work-related stressors and difficult cases led them to use a variety of defence strategies to protect and support their well-being. They also recognised that more strategies to help mitigate work-related stressors and to prevent burnout and compassion fatigue are needed and that management and institutions should lead the development of such interventions.
Conclusion: Our results describe how coordinators' mental health is affected by their daily work. Further research is needed to comprehensively examine these work-related stressors and to generate additional data to support the development of interventions to mitigate burnout and compassion fatigue among OTDCs.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.iccn.2021.103125 | DOI Listing |
BMC Nurs
January 2025
Medical Ethics and Low Research Center, Student Research Committee, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Background: Oncology nurses have a vital role in providing care for individuals with cancer. Ethical dilemmas arise for oncology nurses caring for these patients. Nurses experience moral distress when work conflicts with personal beliefs, leading to inappropriate responses or uncertainty about ethics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Nurs
January 2025
Department of General and Clinical Psychology, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, Lutsk, Ukraine.
Background: At the beginning of 2022, Central Europe entered a state of emergency due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Nurses were particularly vulnerable to a decline in their professional quality of life, facing repeated exposure to military trauma, ethical dilemmas, prolonged working hours, and increased stress and fatigue. This study aimed to contribute to our understanding of the potential mediating effect of war-related continuous traumatic stress on the association between moral distress and professional quality of life, including compassion satisfaction and compassion fatigue, represented by burnout and secondary traumatic stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Endocr Soc
November 2024
Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes, University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, Aurora, CO 80045, USA.
"Pseudo-endocrine disorders" refer to proposed conditions that have never been scientifically proven to exist but, due to widespread misinformation available on the internet and other media, are relatively commonly diagnosed and treated with equally unproven and sometimes dangerous treatments. Adrenal fatigue is a nonexistent condition that supposedly results from adrenal exhaustion and atrophy due to chronic stress and has been promoted as a potential explanation for a variety of symptoms. Testing consists of nonvalidated online surveys and salivary cortisol profiles while treatment is not evidence-based at best and can be dangerous.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Rehabil
January 2025
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido University of Science, Sapporo, Japan.
Objective: This study clarifies the association between ambiguity tolerance and psychological well-being in physical therapists engaged in geriatric rehabilitation.
Design: Multicentre cross-sectional study. Five facilities in Japan.
Aim(s): To investigate the correlation between compassion Fatigue, emotional labour and missed nursing care among intensive care unit nurses.
Design: A cross-sectional design.
Methods: Data were collected from two hospitals in Shandong Province, China, from July to August 2024.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!