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279498

Relationship between Compassion Satisfaction, Compassion Fatigue and Peritraumatic Psychological Distress among Nurses Caring for COVID-19 Patients

Article

Last updated: 28 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Background: COVID-19 outbreak has been acknowledged as a global health threat, that negatively impacting countries' health care systems and economies.‏This pandemic has generated a range of stressors that have an influence on the nurses. Thus, the exposure of nurses to compassion fatigue and psychological distress increased. Aim: Current study aimed to assess the relationship between compassion satisfaction, compassion fatigue and peritraumatic psychological distress among nurses caring for COVID-19 patients. Research design: A descriptive correlational research design was utilized. Sample: A convenient sample; included two hundred and five (205) staff nurses who providing care for COVID-19 patients at Minia isolation hospitals. Setting: This study was conducted at Minia isolation hospitals which include: Minia fever hospital and Minia chest hospital. Tools: Three tools were used; socio-demographic characteristics questionnaire, compassion satisfaction and compassion fatigue scale (PROQOL) in addition to COVID-19 peritraumatic distress index (CPDI). Results: The present study showed that about two thirds of the studied sample had average level of compassion satisfaction, compassion fatigue burnout and secondary traumatic stress. While, less than half of them had high level of peritraumatic psychological distress. Also, a highly significant positive correlation was found between compassion fatigue (secondary traumatic stress) and peritraumatic psychological distress. Conclusions:  Compassion fatigue (burnout) had a positive significant correlation with compassion fatigue (secondary traumatic stress), and a highly significant negative correlation with compassion satisfaction. Recommendations: A resilience program should be implemented to reduce stress and inspire nurses to work efficiently during these difficult times.

DOI

10.21608/msnj.2023.184207.1046

Keywords

COVID-19, Compassion Satisfaction, Compassion fatigue, peritraumatic psychological distress

Authors

First Name

Marwa

Last Name

Ali

MiddleName

Nasser

Affiliation

Clinical instructor of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Minia University

Email

marwanaserali74@gmail.com

City

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Orcid

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First Name

Amany

Last Name

Mohamed

MiddleName

Anter

Affiliation

Assistant Professor of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Minia University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Ebtsam

Last Name

Saber

MiddleName

Hanafy

Affiliation

Lecturer of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Minia University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

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Volume

012

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

34686

Issue Date

2022-12-01

Receive Date

2022-12-29

Publish Date

2022-12-30

Page Start

149

Page End

158

Print ISSN

2537-012X

Online ISSN

2785-9797

Link

https://msnj.journals.ekb.eg/article_279498.html

Detail API

https://msnj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=279498

Order

279,498

Type

Original articles

Type Code

2,049

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Minia Scientific Nursing Journal

Publication Link

https://msnj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Relationship between Compassion Satisfaction, Compassion Fatigue and Peritraumatic Psychological Distress among Nurses Caring for COVID-19 Patients

Details

Type

Article

Created At

23 Jan 2023