2. Objectives
To be familiar with resilience in nursing
To inform the importance for nurse leaders to educate nurses about self-
care and techniques to build resilience.
To be familiar to the factors contributing to nurse dissatisfaction
Know the actions in optimizing nurse resilence
3. Introduction
Health crises, including pandemics, are associated with significant health
risk and concomitant stress, fear, decreased sense of control, and
uncertainty.
Deleterious impact on both physical and mental health for healthcare
professionals ,coping skills may be challenged and strengths may be
elucidated.
Such crises create an imperative for nursing leaders a to support staff
wellbeing through adaptive flexibility for culturally sensitive resilience
and wellbeing interventions.
Strategies (‘tips’) is needed to optimize resilience and wellbeing with an
integrative resilience approach of individual, environment, and
organization/systems
4. Resilience in Nursing
Defined as the ability to face
adverse situations, remain
focused, and continue to be
optimistic for the future,
resilience is a vital characteristic
for nurses in today's complex
healthcare system.
5. Contributing Factors to Nurse
Dissatisfaction
Nurse dissatisfaction at work can
lead to feelings of distress and a
negative professional quality of
life.
Factors includes:
Compassion Fatigue
Burn Out
Secondary Trauma
6. Compassion Fatigue
A tense feeling that develops when a nurse
experiences stress related to repeated
exposure to high acuity and high patient
volumes.
Gradually, the fatigue starts to impact the
quality of care that nurses can provide,
leading to decreased patient safety and
organizational outcomes.
In addition, compassion fatigue can lead to
increased job dissatisfaction and nursing
turnover.
7. Burn Out
a response to physical or emotional
stressors that leads to exhaustion, self-
doubt, cynicism, and ineffectiveness. It's
commonly reported in high-stress areas.
A Robert Wood Johnson Foundation study
found that 18% of nurses experience
depression. One study found that when
caregiver and patient values conflict,
caregivers' sense of integrity may be
compromised.
8. Secondary Trauma
creates feelings of misery and may manifest through
anxiety, sleeplessness, depression, and lack of job
satisfaction.
These symptoms, combined with compassion fatigue
and burnout, can impact patient safety and outcomes
potentially leading to increased turnover and cost,
decreased efficiency, and poor patient outcomes.
9. What is the Issue?
As the frontline caregivers in health care today, nurses accomplish a
myriad of tasks and responsibilities, but often at high personal cost.
The need to juggle competing priorities in often high-stress situations can
result in feeling overwhelmed or burnout.
The negative effect of these stressors can affect the ability of health care
professionals to care for others.
Organizations have a responsibility to support nursing staff and
address the causes of burnout. An emerging method to do this is by
developing and fostering resilient environments and individuals.
10. Optimizing resilience with an integrative
approach for promoting wellbeing is part of
holistic health professions education
including the development of emotional
competencies (Tempski et al. 2012).
11. Developing Strategies for
Nurse Resilience Resilience permits nurses to manage the
demands of their role by adapting to
changing circumstances and maintaining a
sense of professional and personal
fulfillment.
12. A study in 2010 by Cameron and Brownie
identified eight themes that impact
nurse resilience
Experience.
Amount of satisfaction attained.
Positive attitude or sense of faith.
Feeling of making a difference.
Leadership strategies, such as debriefing, validating and
self-reflection.
Support from colleagues, mentors and teams.
Insight in ability to recognize stressors.
Maintaining work-life balance
13. Leader Empowering Behavior
(LEB) workplace empowerment refers to
employees’ ability to access resources,
information, and support needed to
perform their work and to gain the
opportunity to develop.
14. Categories of LEB
Enhancing the meaningfulness of work
Fostering opportunity to participate in decision making
Expressing confidence in high performance
Facilitating the attainment of organizational goals
Providing autonomy and freedom from bureaucratic
restrictions
15. Safety Action to Consider
Leaders should take an
active role in developing
and fostering resilient
environments.
Feeling Valued
Colleague Support
Use of Mentors
Feeling of Making
Difference
Team Support
Organizational Support
Use of Debriefings
Positive Reappraisal
Empowerment
Sense of Accomplishment
16. Tips to Optimize Resilience
Validate & embrace the whole emotional experience
Calm the mind
Reflect
Relationship Matter
Adopt Healthy Lifestyle
Humanities for Healing
Appreciative Inquiry
Asking for help is a strength
17. Building Block
Building nurse resilience through formal education, social support, and
meaningful recognition is an important focus for nurse leaders in
establishing a healthy work environment and maintaining a stable nurse
workforce.
Prioritizing the well-being of caregivers is necessary for patient safety,
quality of care, and the patient experience.
18. Reference
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successful nurse leaders. Nurs Adm Q. 2015;39(2):104–116.
McCann CM, et al. Resilience in the health professions: A review of the
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Magtibay DL and Chesak SS. Decreasing Stress and Burnout in Nurses.
Efficacy of Blended Learning with Stress Management and Resilience
Training Program. The Journal of Nursing Administration,
2017;47(7/8):391-395. 3. Brusie C. Study reveals alarming statistics on
nurse burnout. nurse.org, April 7, 2019.
Schmidt M, Haglund K. Debrief in emergency departments to improve
compassion fatigue and promote resiliency. J Trauma Nurs.
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