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Impact of caring for dying people Impact of caring for dying people
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Background Background
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References References
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References References
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Supportive environments Supportive environments
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Sources of stress Sources of stress
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Personal life Personal life
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Patients/clients Patients/clients
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Colleagues Colleagues
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Managers Managers
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Organizational issues Organizational issues
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Warning signs of prolonged stress Warning signs of prolonged stress
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Physical Physical
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Intellectual Intellectual
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Emotional Emotional
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Strategies for coping with stress Strategies for coping with stress
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Organizational Organizational
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Personal coping strategies Personal coping strategies
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Further reading Further reading
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Further reading Further reading
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter covers theory of palliative care issues associated with caring for people who are dying and the particular stresses involved. Sources of stress are multiple, may be accumulative, and are linked to all areas of an individual’s life. Working with dying people may be stressful, particularly if staff experience personal bereavement and loss. Such work can put staff in touch with personal anxiety about loss and death. Palliative care staff also find it very stressful to deal with patients who experience intractable pain, those who have young children, and those patients who are afraid to die. Symptoms that leave nurses feeling helpless, useless, and impotent are the most stressful to deal with, as is dealing with distressed relatives. The chapter looks at strategies for supporting a workforce involved in the ongoing delivery of palliative care to avoid burnout and compassion fatigue.
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