二次创伤压力和相互痛苦的负面影响:医院环境中的考虑因素。

Chris R Elliot
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引用次数: 0

摘要

护士和其他卫生专业人员在照顾那些正在经历痛苦、疾病或处于生命末期的人时,可能会面临更高的情感障碍风险。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,这一问题尤为突出。本文试图探讨与健康状况不佳的人密切合作会对作为护理提供者的护士产生怎样的负面影响。这种与创伤、疾病和死亡的接触可能会导致创伤的替代体验,从而产生一种与病人共同经历的感觉。这给护士带来的情感负担可能会导致焦虑、压力和脱离病人的需要增加。这可能会对病人护理产生不利影响,护士必须时刻警惕自己是否容易受到继发性创伤的影响,以及是否经历过继发性创伤带来的共同痛苦。尽管护理工作提供了许多积极的体验,但本文重点强调继发性创伤压力的负面影响。本文简要概述了与急性医院环境中的继发性创伤压力和相互痛苦相关的文献,并未考虑精神健康环境或患者。文章的目的是弥合理论与实践之间的差距,同时鼓励护士在实践中对相互折磨的经历进行个人反思。作者认识到 "相互痛苦 "一词的负载性质;然而,这是一个用来解释相关现象的既定短语。虽然 "痛苦 "一词可能意味着护士被动地扮演着病人的角色,但在这里,该词应被视为病人和医务人员的共同体验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The negative impacts of secondary traumatic stress and mutual suffering: considerations in the hospital setting.

Nurses and other health professionals may be at an increased risk of experiencing emotional disturbance associated with caring for people who are experiencing distress, illness or disease or who are at the end stage of their life. This was a particular problem during the COVID-19 pandemic. This article seeks to explore how working closely with individuals who are experiencing ill health may impact negatively on the nurse as a care provider. This exposure to trauma, illness and death can result in a vicarious experience of trauma that may result in a sense of shared experience with the patient. The emotional burden this places on the nurse can lead to increased anxiety, stress and a need to detach from the patient. This can have a detrimental effect on patient care and nurses must remain vigilant to their susceptibility to, and experience of, mutual suffering through secondary trauma. Although nursing offers many positive experiences, this article is focused on highlighting the negative impacts of secondary traumatic stress. This article briefly outlines the literature relating to secondary traumatic stress and mutual suffering in the acute hospital setting and does not consider mental health settings or patients. The aim of the article is to close the theory-practice gap while also encouraging personal reflection on nurses' experiences of mutual suffering in practice. The author recognises the loaded nature of the term 'mutual suffering'; however, this is an established phrase used to explain the phenomena of interest. Although the term 'suffering' may imply a passive sick role for nurses, in this context the term should be seen as a shared sense of the experience of the patients and health staff.

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