BMC Palliative Care (Feb 2020)

Compassion fatigue, watching patients suffering and emotional display rules among hospice professionals: a daily diary study

  • Igor Portoghese,
  • Maura Galletta,
  • Philip Larkin,
  • Salvatore Sardo,
  • Marcello Campagna,
  • Gabriele Finco,
  • Ernesto D’Aloja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-020-0531-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Hospice workers are required to regularly use emotional regulation strategies in an attempt to encourage and sustain terminally ill patients and families. Daily emotional regulation in reaction to constantly watching suffering patients may be intensified among those hospice professionals who have high levels of compassion fatigue. The main object of this study was to examine the relationship between daily exposition to seeing patient suffering and daily emotional work, and to assess whether compassion fatigue (secondary traumatic stress and burnout) buffers this relationship. Methods We used a diary research design for collecting daily fluctuations in seeing patients suffering and emotional work display. Participants filled in a general survey and daily survey over a period of eight consecutive workdays. A total of 39 hospice professionals from two Italian hospices participated in the study. Results Multilevel analyses demonstrated that daily fluctuations in seeing patients suffering was positively related to daily emotional work display after controlling for daily death of patients. Moreover, considering previous levels of compassion fatigue, a buffering effect of high burnout on seeing patients suffering - daily emotional work display relationship was found. Conclusions A central finding of our study is that fluctuations in daily witness of patients suffering are positively related to daily use of positive emotional regulations. Further, our results show that burnout buffers this relationship such that hospice professionals with high burnout use more emotional display in days where they recurrently witness patients suffering.

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