Episode 376: ONS 50th Anniversary: The Science Behind the History of Nursing Burnout and Compassion Fatigue
Description
"At least some of the answer to these issues of compassion fatigue and burnout have to do making our practice environments the very, very best they can be so that nurses and other clinicians can really connect and care for patients in the ways that they want to be able to do that—and the patients need them to be able to do. I think there's a lot that is here already and will be coming, and I feel pretty optimistic about it," ONS member Anne Gross, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN, senior vice president for patient care services and chief nursing officer at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, MA, told ONS member Christine Ladd, MSN, RN, OCN®, NE-BC, member of the ONS 50th anniversary committee, during a conversation about burnout and compassion fatigue in oncology nursing. Ladd spoke with Gross and ONS member Tracy Gosselin, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, AOCN®, FAAN, senior vice president and chief nursing executive at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, NY, about the history of nurse well-being and how nurses and health systems are approaching it today.
Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0
Episode Notes
- This episode is not eligible for NCPD.
- ONS Podcast™ episodes:
- ONS 50th anniversary series
- Episode 315: Processing Grief as an Oncology Nurse
- Episode 292: What We Need to Do to Retain Today's Oncology Nursing Workforce
- Episode 291: Build a Sense of Belonging for Nurses and Patients
- Episode 264: Stop the Stressors and Improve Your Mental Health as a Nurse
- Episode 246: Create a Culture of Safety: Fair and Just Culture
- Episode 160: Build Innovative Staff Education Tools and Resources
- ONS Voice articles:
- Critical Event Debriefings Can Reduce Oncology Nurses' Risk of Compassion Fatigue and Burnout
- ONS Chapters and DNP Candidates Combine Forces to Support Oncology Nurse Well-Being
- Step Out of Reality With Virtual Breaks to Support Your Wellness at Work
- Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing articles:
- Burnout and Well-Being: Evaluating Perceptions in Bone Marrow Transplantation Nurses Using a Mindfulness Application
- Engaging Nurse Residents Through Poetry
- Strategies to Mitigate Moral Distress in Oncology Nursing
- ONS Nurse Well-Being Learning Library
- ONS Communities
- ONS Chapters
- Connie Henke Yarbro Oncology Nursing History Center
- Oncology Nursing Foundation Resiliency Resources
To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities.
To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email pubONSVoice@ons.org.
Highlights From This Episode
Gross: "I was on an oncology unit early in practice. And just like today, we were dealing with very sick patients. We were dealing with death and dying. We were administering very toxic treatments and really pushing a field forward in oncology. So there were similar challenges, but I think different from today. There weren't the kind of resources; there wasn't the body of work that's been done today around compassion fatigue and burnout, work-life balance, and things like that. There was not that body of literature and science like there is today. And so there was more of a grassroots kind of support building in the clinical environment that I think I experienced." TS 2:35
Gosselin: "I think there's also a piece when we think about nurses in the work we do—we also have families. We have aging parents and children. And sometimes that burnout is multifactorial in that we have family obligations and other obligations that make it really hard. And for some people, they say work is their escape from some of that. Yet it's all hard to balance sometimes." TS 8:09
Gosselin: "It's this question that people like Anne, myself, other chief nurses are saying. If we add this new technology, what are we going to take away? Do we need another alarm to ring to the phone or to their badge? How much can you ask people to do and not be distract



