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  2. Life Events and Difficulties Schedule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_Events_and...

    The Life Events and Difficulties Schedule is a psychological measurement of the stressfulness of life events. It was created by psychologists George Brown and Tirril Harris in 1978. [ 1 ] Instead of accumulating the stressfulness of different events, as was done in the Social Readjustment Rating Scale by Thomas Holmes and Richard Rahe, they ...

  3. Compassion fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compassion_fatigue

    People who experience compassion fatigue may exhibit a variety of symptoms including, but not limited to, lowered concentration, numbness or feelings of helplessness, irritability, lack of self-satisfaction, withdrawal, aches and pains, [17] exhaustion, anger, or a reduced ability to feel empathy. [4]

  4. Psychological stress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_stress

    Life events scales can be used to assess stressful things that people experience in their lives. One such scale is the Holmes and Rahe Stress Scale, also known as the Social Readjustment Rating Scale, or SRRS. [23] Developed by psychiatrists Thomas Holmes and Richard Rahe in 1967, the scale lists 43 stressful events.

  5. Social stress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_stress

    There are several questionnaires used to assess environmental and psychosocial stress. Such self-report measures include the Test of Negative Social Exchange, [17] the Marital Adjustment Test, [18] the Risky Families Questionnaire, [19] the Holmes–Rahe Stress Inventory, [20] the Trier Inventory for the Assessment of Chronic Stress, [21] the Daily Stress Inventory, [22] the Job Content ...

  6. Emotional exhaustion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_exhaustion

    Personal resources, such as status, social support, money, or shelter, may reduce or prevent an employee's emotional exhaustion. According to the Conservation of Resources theory (COR), people strive to obtain, retain and protect their personal resources, either instrumental (for example, money or shelter), social (such as social support or status), or psychological (for example, self-esteem ...

  7. Stress management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress_management

    Stress management consists of a wide spectrum of techniques and psychotherapies aimed at controlling a person's level of psychological stress, especially chronic stress, generally for the purpose of improving the function of everyday life. Stress produces numerous physical and mental symptoms which vary according to each individual's ...

  8. Hardiness (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardiness_(psychology)

    The coping style most commonly associated with hardiness is transformational coping, which transforms stressful events into less stressful ones. [3] [24] At the cognitive level this involves setting the event into a broader perspective in which it does not seem so terrible. At the level of action, people high in hardiness are believed to react ...

  9. Social buffering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_buffering

    Psychological research in the mid-twentieth century began to increasingly reveal the role of stressful life events on psychological well-being. [1] This was also around the time that there was a focus on creating standardized approach to diagnosing mental illnesses, with the first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (commonly referred to as the DSM) being published in 1952. [2]