BURNOUT REDUCTION AMONG REGISTERED NURSES THROUGH AN EDUCATIONAL TREATMENT PROGRAM.
Author(s)
WALPOLE, BARBARA REED.Keywords
Education, Adult and Continuing.
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Sorry, the full text of this article is not available in Huskie Commons. Please click on the alternative location to access it.168 p.
Testing the effectiveness of an educational treatment program in reducing role-triggered burnout among registered nurses was the primary purpose of this study. The underlying rationale was to help nurses meet a need for such programs. This need stemmed from the fact that nurses are prone to develop burnout on the job largely due to their continued exposure to the dual role stressors of ambiguity and conflict.The subjects were 39 volunteer, registered nurse participants who were assigned to either an experimental or a control group. The groups were matched through use of results obtained from a demographic instrument developed by the researcher. The experimental group received an eight-hour educational experience based on a stress-inoculation training design. These educational programs (four in all) were conducted in three cooperating facilities--one hospital and two institutions of higher education in northern Illinois.The dependent variables were measured by the Role Conflict/Role Ambiguity instrument and the Staff Burnout Scale for Health Professionals. Hypotheses testing was carried out via use of analysis of covariance and paired t-tests.The major conclusion of the study was that no statistically significant difference could be found to exist between the members of the two research groups of this study. Several factors such as time frames (particularly the length of individual sessions and the duration between these sessions), presentation of the treatment programs on four separate occasions, and problems associated with the response scales on the instruments were discussed in detail. In addition, implications for both the profession and the employing institutions concerning continued, unremediated burnout among nurses were considered.Recommendations for further research and program development concluded the study.
Date
2011-06-22Identifier
oai:commons.lib.niu.edu:10843/9048http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/9048
http://hdl.handle.net/10843/9048