1992
DOI: 10.1521/jscp.1992.11.2.129
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Negotiating the Reality of Caregiving: Hope, Burnout and Nursing

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Cited by 56 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…At an emotional level hope plays a role in sustaining people. Sherwin et al (1992) examined hope and burnout in the face of stressful occupations, finding that high-hope individuals suffer lower emotional exhaustion, enabling them to ameliorate the stress of the job into a less-depleting task.…”
Section: Hopementioning
confidence: 99%
“…At an emotional level hope plays a role in sustaining people. Sherwin et al (1992) examined hope and burnout in the face of stressful occupations, finding that high-hope individuals suffer lower emotional exhaustion, enabling them to ameliorate the stress of the job into a less-depleting task.…”
Section: Hopementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using the total hope score, studies have shown that low hope is associated with poor adjustment, such as high negative affect (Snyder et al, 1991), depressive symptoms among college students (Chang, 2003), and burnout among nurses (Sherwin et al, 1992). The findings from a handful of studies have raised the possibility that both agency and pathways contribute uniquely to how hope is related to relevant external variables.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature attests to the effects of hopefulness and optimism on psychological and physical well-being (Anderson & Snyder, 1988;Elliott, Witty, Herrick, & Hoffman, 1991;Lewis & Kliewer, 1996;Nunn, Lewin, Walton, & Carr, 1996;Sherwin et al, 1992;Snyder, Harris, et al, 1991;Snyder, Irving, & Anderson, 1991). Moreover, research findings suggest that coping may be one of the possible pathways by which individual differences in hopefulness and optimism lead to the production of adaptive outcomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%