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ICU Nurse Burnout Research

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Stress and Burnout Among ICU Nurses Most people may experience some stress at some point in their lives due to various reasons. According to Nazari, Mirzamohamadi, and Yousefi (2015), occupational stress is the primary cause of stress in a person’s life, and the study showed that more than 80% of nurses reported having higher levels of stress compared to other occupations (Nazari, Mirzamohamadi, & Yousefi, 2015). Some research showed ICU nurses are more prone to occupational stress and burnout than nurses who work at different wards (Nazari et al., 2015). The purpose of this paper is to find out why ICU nurses experience more stress and burnout than nurses in other areas, such as Med-Surg unit, and to determine possible coping mechanisms …show more content…

Also, the statistic showed that about 40% to 84% of patients who received CPR in ICU end up dying within 24 hours; thus, ICU nurses deal with patient’s death more often than Med-Surg nurses (McMeekin, Hickman, Douglas, & Kelley, 2017). Because of that, many ICU nurses are getting psychological trauma, which causes a high level of anxiety (McMeekin et al., 2017). Moreover, ICU nurses often face with the burden of responsibility regarding making difficult decisions, frustration, emotional distress, and disappointment while they are taking care of dying patients and their families (Nazari et al., …show more content…

Moss, Good, Gozal, Kleinpell, and Sessler (2016) state that burnout not only decreases patient’s satisfaction and quality of care, but it also affects job satisfaction, mental health, and physical health among nurses (Moss, Good, Gozal, Kleinpell, & Sessler, 2016). The research showed that burnout leads to the increased turnover rate among nurses, and as a result, 20% of nurses determined to leave her or his position within one year and looked for a less stressful job (Rushton, Batcheller, Schroeder, & Donohue, 2015). Resilience. According to Rushton, Batcheller, Schroeder, and Donohue (2015), resilience is the ability to adjust well and recover from stressful events (Rushton et al., 2015). Rushton et al. (2015) state that nurses who are resilient or are learning coping mechanisms to deal with their stress and burnout can adapt the stressful work environment in ICU better than nurses who are not resilient (Rushton et al., 2015). Therefore, nurses can develop resilience by training for problem-solving skills and mindfulness, or by attending activities such as physical exercise, prayer, or painting (Rushton et al., 2015).

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