Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03212417

Education as an Intervention of Compassion Fatigue

Pilot/Feasibility Study of a Compassion Fatigue Education Intervention in Hematology/Oncology Clinical Research Nurses (CRNs) and Bone Morrow Transplant (BMT) Nurses

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
City of Hope Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact education has on reducing compassion fatigue in Oncology Clinical Research Nurses.

Detailed description

Slatten, Carson, and Carson (2011) describe compassion fatigue as "an occupational hazard for those in the helping professions and is a natural consequence of working with people who have experienced extremely stressful events" (p. 327). Compassion fatigue (CF) is a condition that can affect one's physical, emotional, and social well-being. CF can exist or be misunderstood as burnout, defined as the "inability to cope with job stress, displays symptoms such as emotional exhaustion, and reduced personal and professional accomplishments" (Maslach, Schaufeli, \& Leiter, 2001). The term Secondary Traumatic stress has been used within the literature to describe nurses' exposure to the traumatic situations of patients and is often used interchangeably with compassion fatigue (Beck, 2011; Flarity, Gentry, \& Mesinkoof, 2013), but is contrasted by compassion satisfaction (CS): the pleasure that nurses derive from the ability to perform work well (Stamm, 2009). Slatten et al., (2011) described compassion fatigue as a natural consequence of nursing: therefore, prevention of exposure should not be the focus of any intervention. The Literature review has identified that nurses should be educated about risk factors and coping strategies to combat compassion fatigue. Neville and Cole (2013) describe incentives for organizations to proactively prevent CF, they explained: The care patients receive from nurses is one of the most significant predictors of patient satisfaction and is a quality indicator of overall healthcare performance. Research demonstrates that nurses' perception of work environment and patient satisfaction are highly correlated; thus, measures to enhance nurses' ability to deliver excellent care and to thrive in their work environments are of paramount importance to healthcare institutions (p. 349). Most patients on clinical trials have tried standard of care treatment unsuccessfully. Little is known, due to the lack of research, demonstrating the impact of CF, CS or Burnout on CRNs and BMT Nurses. Both nursing populations' work closely with oncology patients, either during or following participation on a clinical trial, developing a close relationship with the patients and their families. The nurses are at risk for exposure to emotionally disturbing patient outcomes that can be detrimental on psychological health. One-third of the Hematology and Solid Tumor clinical trials at City of Hope National Medical Center are phase 1 trials, which are to determine dose limiting toxicity with the intent of improving patient outcomes. Nurses are providing patient care to individuals with a poor prognosis, after repeat exposure to emotional pain, the CRN and BMT Nurse leave the organization due to intolerance of suffering. This project is important to teach nurses how to recognize and manage CF. The educational intervention could reduce nurse turnover, increase morale, and improve patient satisfaction, all of which could be a cost savings to the organization.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEREducational interventionPresentation of risk factors, signs and symptoms, and interventions on compassion fatigue

Timeline

Start date
2017-06-06
Primary completion
2019-07-17
Completion
2019-07-17
First posted
2017-07-11
Last updated
2019-10-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03212417. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.