Emotionally or Physically Exhausted?
As healthcare professionals, we always preach the value of rest and relaxation to our patients and its positive benefits on our overall health; we cannot forget that this applies to us.
Positive outcomes, as well as nurse and patient safety, are at risk when nurse fatigue arises. This can be a result of both physical and emotional exhaustion.
For example, a 2017 Kronos Incorporated survey evaluating nurses throughout the U.S. determined that over 85% of respondents claimed that their jobs had caused them both physical and mental exhaustion; this number has only continued to rise over the past several years.
In a more recent July 2021 study by Nursing C.E. Central evaluating thousands of nursing responses across the U.S., 76% of respondents claimed that emotional exhaustion has contributed to their feelings of burnout, and 55% of respondents claimed physical exhaustion as a leading contributor to their burnout.
I know that it can be difficult to leave a nursing job when you want to continue serving and caring for others, but remember that you must maintain your own health before you can improve someone else’s.
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