The Causes Of Nursing Burnout

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In the words of Grissel Hernandez (2009), “Nurses are experts in caring for other but are novices in caring for themselves.” One of the concerns after graduating is the idea of going into a profession where one of the main issues is being exhausted of the one thing that at some point guided a person to feel the desire to step into a career that at the end could be a cause for stress and burnout. Nowadays nursing burnout is not an uncommon issue that is occurring in the health care field. Even though, it is so common, it can be considered a devastating issue that is causing a lot of problems in the in the lives of many nurses and health care providers. That in a daily basis might be facing this situation without a clue on what would be the next …show more content…

There are many individual and situational factors that are linked to nursing burnout. Some of the researched aspects that could serve as nursing burnout predictors are age, physical and psychological symptoms, job satisfaction, work engagement, and environment (Lee, 2015). Likewise, some studies have also discovered that prolonged stress is being one of the main causes for nursing burnout. Therefore it is important to remember that stress in nurses can develop from numerous causes such as organizational, interpersonal, and individual factors. Also, stress can result from job related factors, such as task overload, conflicting tasks, inability to do the task assigned because of lack of preparation or experience, vague or inadequate information regarding the assignment an many more negative experiences as the mentioned above can make a difference in a nurse that is not experiencing burnout (Idress, 2015). Also, recalling that there are several specialties in nursing, which opens a door for different types of environment experiences that can cause different levels of stress in the lives of those that are in these types of places such as critical care units. For instance, some of the physical environment that may be stressful for nurses intensive care units, emergency departments, and mental health departments …show more content…

In addition, 16% of nurses rated quality of care on their work unit as fair or poor, 5% reported patient falls, 11% reported medication errors, and 14% reported infections. A rise was found in the report of fair or poor quality of care, a 30% increase in patient falls, a 47% increase in medication errors, and a 32% increase in infection (Nantsupawat,

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