Prevalence and predictors of compassion fatigue, burnout and compassion satisfaction among oncology nurses: A cross-sectional survey

Apr 6, 2016International journal of nursing studies

How common compassion fatigue, burnout, and job satisfaction are among cancer nurses and what predicts them

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Abstract

A survey of 650 oncology nurses in Shanghai reveals that higher compassion fatigue and burnout are associated with increased years of nursing experience and working in secondary hospitals.

  • Compassion fatigue and burnout are prevalent among oncology nurses with more years of experience.
  • Nurses in secondary hospitals reported higher levels of stress compared to those in tertiary hospitals.
  • Adopting passive coping styles is linked to increased levels of compassion fatigue and burnout.
  • Cognitive empathy and organizational support are significant protective factors for professional quality of life.
  • 'Perspective taking' is identified as the strongest predictor of compassion satisfaction, explaining 23.0% of its variance.
  • Personality traits such as openness and conscientiousness are positively associated with compassion satisfaction, while neuroticism negatively predicts compassion fatigue and burnout.

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Full Text

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