International emergency nursing
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Observational Study
Compassion satisfaction and compassion fatigue in Australian emergency nurses: A descriptive cross-sectional study.
Emergency nurses are at risk of compassion fatigue. Compassion fatigue caused by exposure to suffering may compromise the individual's personal wellbeing and reduce work efficiency. ⋯ Average to high levels of Compassion Satisfaction and low to average levels of Compassion Fatigue were found in emergency nurses. Issues contributing to stress were work and role related. An understanding of these stressors may help nurses and nurse managers to ameliorate emergency nurses' levels of stress and help limit staff burnout.
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Emergency Department (ED) triage decision-making is a complex process. Triage scales are used to determine patient acuity level, however, they do not provide information on how nurses make triage decisions. This focus group study was part of a larger project to develop a psychometrically sound instrument to measure triage decision-making by nurses; the Triage Decision-Making Instrument. We report important incidental findings that emerged during the study that the participants identified as factors impeding triage decision-making. ⋯ The findings demonstrate how interrelated system factors impede nurses triage decision-making. Triage nurses require support in their role and initiatives are needed to reduce the pressure they feel in relation to resolving system issues. Larger system issues and the capacity of the individual decision-makers must be accounted for within the context of increasing effectiveness and safety of ED triage.