Unit-based differences in compassion satisfaction, burnout, secondary traumatic stress, and turnover intention among nurses in a tertiary hospital in Abu Dhabi

Nov 14, 2025Frontiers in public health

Differences in job satisfaction, burnout, stress from trauma, and quitting thoughts among nurses in different hospital units in Abu Dhabi

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Abstract

A total of 211 nurses participated in the study, revealing significant differences in by clinical unit assignment.

  • No statistically significant differences were found in , , or Secondary Traumatic Stress across different nurse designations.
  • Practical Nurses reported slightly more favorable burnout scores, approaching significance.
  • Turnover intention varied significantly among clinical units, with the lowest scores in Operating Theaters/Perioperative Care and the highest in Emergency and Maternity units.
  • Nurse designation and years of experience were not associated with significant differences in professional quality of life.
  • Increased burnout and turnover intention trends among charge nurses suggest the potential need for enhanced leadership support.

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Key numbers

3.15
Score
Mean score in the Emergency Department.
211
Sample Size
Total number of nurses surveyed.

Full Text

What this is

  • This study investigates differences in , , secondary traumatic stress, and among nurses in Abu Dhabi.
  • It examines how these factors vary by clinical area and years of nursing experience.
  • Findings indicate that clinical unit assignment significantly influences , while designation and experience do not.

Essence

  • among nurses varies significantly by clinical unit, with higher rates in Emergency and Maternity units. No significant differences were found based on nurse designation or years of experience.

Key takeaways

  • significantly differs across clinical units, with the highest in Emergency and Maternity units. This suggests that environmental factors play a crucial role in nurse retention.
  • No significant differences in , , or secondary traumatic stress were found among different nurse designations. This indicates that role-specific factors may be less impactful than environmental conditions.
  • Years of nursing experience did not significantly affect , , or . This suggests that workplace conditions may be more influential than individual experience.

Caveats

  • The cross-sectional design limits the ability to establish causal relationships between and professional quality of life components.
  • The non-probability convenience sampling may introduce selection bias, affecting the generalizability of the findings.
  • The study's reliance on self-reported data could introduce response bias, potentially skewing the results regarding stress and satisfaction levels.

Definitions

  • Compassion Satisfaction: The positive feelings derived from helping others and the fulfillment gained from one’s work in caregiving.
  • Burnout: A state of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion caused by prolonged and excessive stress, often leading to reduced job performance.
  • Turnover Intention: The likelihood that an employee will leave their current position or profession, often measured as a predictor of actual turnover.

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