scholarly journals COVID-19 patient care predicts nurses' parental burnout and child abuse: Mediating effects of compassion fatigue

2021 ◽  
pp. 105458
Author(s):  
Margaret C. Stevenson ◽  
Kenyon College ◽  
Cynthia T. Schaefer ◽  
Vaishnavi M. Ravipati
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 185-188
Author(s):  
Denise Altman

BackgroundThe COVID pandemic challenged IBCLCs and other heathcare providers to determine how to meet the needs of new families while maintaining safety for both patients and caregivers. In addition, both workplace and personal stressors triggered by ongoing changes increased the risk of compassion fatigue.ProgramInitial patient support was offered at a free-standing lactation medicine clinic. After office closure, lactation services moved to multiple pediatric offices.ResultAlthough the worksite changed after the first six weeks of the pandemic, direct patient care providing lactation support remained uninterrupted, and continues to this day. The IBCLCs are addressing the issue of compassion fatigue with awareness along with peer to peer support.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 239-263
Author(s):  
Jae Yop Kim ◽  
Park, Hayeon ◽  
한기주 ◽  
성신명

1998 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon F. Merz ◽  
Pamela Sankar ◽  
Simon S. Yoo

Physicians and other health care providers owe ethical and legal duties to patients to maintain the secrecy of the information learned during the course of patient care. This obligation is fulfilled by limiting access to such information to only those involved in the patient's care-that is, to those within the “circle of confidentiality.” As a general rule, providers may only disclose to others with the written prior consent of the patient. Exceptions may be “ethically and legally justified because of overriding social considerations,” when permitted or compelled by law. For example, eleven states permit providers to disclose identified records to approved researchers.’ Many states compel disclosure in cases where a patient threatens serious bodily harm to another; require reporting to health or law enforcement authorities of communicable diseases, gunshot or knife wounds, or child abuse; and mandate reporting of cancer or other health care cases to state registries (such as immunization, birth, and abortion).


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (26_suppl) ◽  
pp. 244-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eve Easton

244 Background: Working with cancer patients is considered inherently stressful with high levels of burnout reported. There is limited research that focuses on the multidisciplinary team as a whole; research to date tends to focus on patient death from the perspective of the bedside oncology nurse, the physician or social worker. With the focus on those disciplines individually, thereby ignoring the centrality of the multidisciplinary nature of oncology care and excluding fundamental team members who provide care and are potentially impacted by the death of the patient. What is evident in current research is that long term meaningful relationships are developed between members of the multidisciplinary team and patients, with the consequences and implications of unresolved or unacknowledged grief being well documented as burnout and compassion fatigue. It is suggested that better support, acknowledgement of patient death and grief has implications for individual staff wellbeing, for staff training, support and the healthcare system, all of which have impact on the quality of patient care, improve retention, decrease burnout and compassion fatigue. The aim of this research is to explore the experience of death and subsequent bereavement from the perspective of those healthcare professionals who provide direct patient care at an outpatient oncology clinic. Methods: A qualitative study using a phenomenological approach was conducted to explore multidisciplinary team members experiencing regarding patient death and subsequent bereavement in the outpatient oncology setting. Individual interviews were conducted with 11 members of staff from 5 oncology teams based in the outpatient clinic of a magnet designated hospital. Results: Qualitative analysis yielded the following themes: insight, mortality, relationships, communication, grieving and bereavement, training and education, support and coping. Conclusions: To understand how patient death affects team members who provide patient care and support mechanisms used. Participants identified a need for acknowledging patient death in the work environment and had multiple suggestions for creating a supportive environment.


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