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A 1967 journal article in Canadian Nurse predicted a severe future shortage of nurses in Canada unless the shortage of nursing faculty in undergraduate and graduate programs was remedied. [43] In the mid-1960s some of the factors that contributed to a lack of retention and growth in nursing faculty included the rate at which professors reaching ...
A 1967 journal article in Canadian Nurse predicted a severe future shortage of nurses in Canada unless the shortage of nursing faculty in undergraduate and graduate programs was remedied. [31] In the mid-1960s some of the factors that contributed to a lack of retention and growth in nursing faculty included the rate at which professors reaching ...
One source addressed the issue of nurses' mental health and stress leading to surging rates of burnout with "more than 40% of hospital staff nurses score in the high range of work-related burnout". [60] Nurses revealed a spike in depression levels, anxiety, suicide, and damage to their overall wellbeing.
In 1969, American prison official Harold B Bradley used the term burnout in a criminology paper to describe the fatigued staff at a centre for treating young adult offenders. [35] Bradley's article has been cited as the first known academic paper to use the term. [36]
Marlene F. Kramer was an American nurse, educator and author. She wrote a 1974 book, Reality Shock: Why Nurses Leave Nursing, which examined burnout in the nursing profession. Her book has been widely cited in subsequent studies on retention and satisfaction within nursing.
The Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) is a psychological assessment instrument comprising 22 symptom items pertaining to occupational burnout. [1] The original form of the MBI was developed by Christina Maslach and Susan E. Jackson with the goal of assessing an individual's experience of burnout. [ 2 ]
The Canadian Journal of Statistics; Communications in Statistics; International Statistical Review; Journal of the American Statistical Association; Journal of Multivariate Analysis; Journal of the Royal Statistical Society; Probability and Mathematical Statistics; Sankhyā: The Indian Journal of Statistics; Scandinavian Journal of Statistics ...
In one study, 86% of emergency room nurses met the criteria for compassion fatigue. [37] In another study, more than 25% of ambulance paramedics were identified as having severe ranges of post-traumatic symptoms. [28] In addition, 34% of hospice nurses in another study met the criteria for secondary traumatic stress/compassion fatigue. [28]