| Literature DB >> 29563960 |
Reem Jarrad1, Sawsan Hammad2, Tagreed Shawashi1, Naser Mahmoud3.
Abstract
AIM: This study aimed to detect if there were differences in compassion fatigue (CF) among nurses based on substance use and demographic variables of gender, marital status, type of health institution and income.Entities:
Keywords: Compassion fatigue; Demographic variables; Nurses; Substance use
Year: 2018 PMID: 29563960 PMCID: PMC5848583 DOI: 10.1186/s12991-018-0183-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Gen Psychiatry ISSN: 1744-859X Impact factor: 3.455
Description of the personal demographics, N = 282
| Variable | ||
|---|---|---|
| Type of hospital | ||
| Psychiatric hospital | 93 (33) | |
| Governmental hospital | 141 (50) | |
| Educational (training) hospital | 48 (17) | |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 101 (36) | |
| Female | 181 (64) | |
| Age | 32.3 (6.6) | |
| Marital status | ||
| Married | 192 (68) | |
| Not married | 90 (32) | |
| Experience as a nurse | 9.9 (6.5) | |
| Experience in the current unit/ward | 6.3 (5.4) | |
| Income | ||
| Less or equal 600 | 209 (74) | |
| More than 600 | 73 (26) | |
Description of the substance use among nurses, N = 282
| Variable | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| Smoking | 81 (29) | 201 (71) |
| Alcohol | 23 (8) | 259 (92) |
| Sleeping pills | 46 (16) | 236 (84) |
| Power drinks | 52 (18.0) | 230 (82) |
| Coffee | 194 (69) | 88 (31) |
| Antidepressants | 41 (15) | 241 (86) |
| Anti-anxiety drugs | 48 (17) | 234 (83) |
| Stimulants (amphetamines) | 33 (12) | 249 (88) |
| Analgesic drugs | 115 (41) | 167 (59) |
Differences in compassion fatigue level in relation to socio-demographic and substance use
| Variable | Test value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Type of hospital | |||
| Psychiatric hospital | 44.4 (19.2) | 8.92 | .000 |
| Governmental hospital | 36.7 (16.5) | ||
| Educational (training) hospital | 46.7 (15.1) | ||
| Gender | |||
| Male | 44.3 (19.3) | 2.43 | .015 |
| Female | 39.0 (16.4) | ||
| Marital status | |||
| Married | 42.8 (17.2) | 2.66 | .008 |
| Not married | 36.9 (18.0) | ||
| Income | |||
| Less or equal 600 | 40.3 (18.3) | .959 | .34 |
| More than 600 | 42.6 (15.7) | ||
| Smoking | |||
| Yes | 44.5 (17.4) | 2.19 | .029 |
| No | 39.4 (17.6) | ||
| Alcohol | |||
| Yes | 44.1(21.8) | .912 | .363 |
| No | 40.6 (17.3) | ||
| Sleeping pills | |||
| Yes | 50.5 (19.4) | 4.13 | .000 |
| No | 39.0 (16.7) | ||
| Power drinks | |||
| Yes | 47.6 (19.3) | 3.10 | .002 |
| No | 39.4 (16.9) | ||
| Coffee | |||
| Yes | 41.3 (18.6) | .493 | .62 |
| No | 40.1 (15.5) | ||
| Antidepressants | |||
| Yes | 48.0 (16.9) | 2.82 | .005 |
| No | 39.7 (17.6) | ||
| Anti-anxiety drugs | |||
| Yes | 45.9 (16.9) | 2.17 | .031 |
| No | 39.9 (17.7) | ||
| Amphetamines | |||
| Yes | 45.5 (15.3) | 1.60 | .10 |
| No | 40.3 (17.9) | ||
| Analgesic drugs | |||
| Yes | 41.2 (20.5) | .257 | .797 |
| No | 40.7 (15.6) | ||
| Items about you | |
| 1. | I am happy |
| 2. | I find my life satisfying |
| 3. | I have beliefs that sustain me |
| 4. | I feel estranged from others |
| 5. | I find that I learn new things from those I care for |
| 6. | I force myself to avoid certain thoughts or feelings that remind me of a frightening experience |
| 7. | I find myself avoiding certain activities or situations because they remind me of a frightening experience |
| 8. | I have gaps in my memory about frightening events |
| 9. | I feel connected to others |
| 10. | I feel calm |
| 11. | I believe that I have a good balance between my work and my free time |
| 12. | I have difficulty falling or staying asleep |
| 13. | I have outburst of anger or irritability with little provocation |
| 14. | I am the person I always wanted to be |
| 15. | I startle easily |
| 16. | While working with a victim, I thought about violence against the perpetrator |
| 17. | I am a sensitive person |
| 18. | I have flashbacks connected to those I help |
| 19. | I have good peer support when I need to work through a highly stressful experience |
| 20. | I have had first-hand experience with traumatic events in my adult life |
| 21. | I have had first-hand experience with traumatic events in my childhood |
| 22. | I think that I need to “work through” a traumatic experience in my life |
| 23. | I think that I need more close friends |
| 24. | I think that there is no one to talk with about highly stressful experiences |
| 25. | I have concluded that I work too hard for my own good |
| 26. | Working with those I help brings me a great deal of satisfaction |
| 27. | I feel invigorated after working with those I help |
| 28. | I am frightened of things a person I helped has said or done to me |
| 29. | I experience troubling dreams similar to those I help |
| 30. | I have happy thoughts about those I help and how I could help them |
| 31. | I have experienced intrusive thoughts of times with especially difficult people I helped |
| 32. | I have suddenly and involuntarily recalled a frightening experience while working with a person I helped |
| 33. | I am pre-occupied with more than one person I help |
| 34. | I am losing sleep over a person I help’s traumatic experiences |
| 35. | I have joyful feelings about how I can help the victims I work with |
| 36. | I think that I might have been “infected” by the traumatic stress of those I help |
| 37. | I think that I might be positively “inoculated” by the traumatic stress of those I help |
| 38. | I remind myself to be less concerned about the wellbeing of those I help |
| 39. | I have felt trapped by my work as a helper |
| 40. | I have a sense of hopelessness associated with working with those I help |
| 41. | I have felt “on edge” about various things and I attribute this to working with certain people I help |
| 42. | I wish that I could avoid working with some people I help |
| 43. | Some people I help are particularly enjoyable to work with |
| 44. | I have been in danger working with people I help |
| 45. | I feel that some people I help dislike me personally |
| Items about being a helper and your helping environment | |
| 46. | I like my work as a helper |
| 47. | I feel like I have the tools and resources that I need to do my work as a helper |
| 48. | I have felt weak, tired, run down as a result of my work as helper |
| 49. | I have felt depressed as a result of my work as a helper |
| 50. | I have thoughts that I am a “success” as a helper |
| 51. | I am unsuccessful at separating helping from personal life |
| 52. | I enjoy my co-workers |
| 53. | I depend on my co-workers to help me when I need it |
| 54. | My co-workers can depend on me for help when they need it |
| 55. | I trust my co-workers |
| 56. | I feel little compassion toward most of my co-workers |
| 57. | I am pleased with how I am able to keep up with helping technology |
| 58. | I feel I am working more for the money/prestige than for personal fulfillment |
| 59. | Although I have to do paperwork that I don’t like, I still have time to work with those I help |
| 60. | I find it difficult separating my personal life from my helper life |
| 61. | I am pleased with how I am able to keep up with helping techniques and protocols |
| 62. | I have a sense of worthlessness/disillusionment/resentment associated with my role as a helper |
| 63. | I have thoughts that I am a “failure” as a helper |
| 64. | I have thoughts that I am not succeeding at achieving my life goals |
| 65. | I have to deal with bureaucratic, unimportant tasks in my work as a helper |
| 66. | I plan to be a helper for a long time |