How to Overcome Compassion Fatigue
The American Psychological Association (APA) offers various routes you can take to ensure that you and/or your colleagues are not only addressing your compassion fatigue symptoms but also overcoming them. Check them out:
Incorporating self-care regimes into your day
Looking to reduce stress levels by practicing self-care? There are so many ways to do this! Facilities that need healthcare providers will typically begin a partnership with a staffing agency in order to have ‘more hands-on deck.’
If you break your agreement, this puts one less person on the schedule; and in nursing, this can make a huge difference in patient care delivery.
Practice ‘self-compassion’
Mental health and self-compassion expert, Kristin Neff, defines self-compassion as:
The ability to notice our own suffering and to be moved by it, making us want to actively do something to alleviate our own suffering.
Practicing self-compassion can truly change your outlook and help to better understand yourself and your own stressors.
Create or surround yourself with a community
Joining support groups, staying connected to family or friends, or confiding in a colleague are all great examples!
Focus on compassion satisfaction
Although this can be a challenge, directing your thoughts to focus on the good and not the bad is vital in preventing compassion fatigue. Trust me.
Familiarity with the concept of compassion fatigue, along with the signs and symptoms, allows nurses and other care giving providers to recognize the concept within themselves and amongst their colleagues.
Therefore, the first step in reducing compassion fatigue is to acknowledge its existence.
Mental health resource, GoodTherapy, highlights several signs compassion fatigue symptoms that you should be aware of when working in the healthcare setting. These include:
- Chronic physical and emotional exhaustion
- Depersonalization
- Feelings of inequity toward the therapeutic or caregiver relationship
- Irritability
- Feelings of self-contempt
- Difficulty sleeping
- Weight loss
- Spiritual weariness
- Headaches
- Poor job satisfaction
Although some of these may seem ambiguous or similar to symptoms of other various conditions, compassion fatigue can be detrimental to the quality of care delivered to patients and can impact a healthcare provider significantly both in and outside of the workplace.
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