2016
DOI: 10.19030/cier.v9i4.9790
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Teaching The Practice Of Compassion To Nursing Students Within An Online Learning Environment: A Qualitative Study Protocol

Abstract: Background: There is an increasing global demand for higher education to incorporate flexible delivery. Nursing education has been at the forefront of developing flexible online education and offering programs 'anywhere and anytime'. In response to calls to teach compassion in nursing education, there is an abundance of literature concerning classroom teaching, but few online studies.

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Cited by 16 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Recently, a two-week online compassion module has been explored with undergraduate nursing students (Hofmeyer et al, 2016). This online program is intended to help nursing students gain an understanding of the importance of: compassion in healthcare, being compassionate toward others (patients and colleagues), compassion toward oneself, cultivating resilience, and identifying factors that may hinder or enable compassionate care.…”
Section: Graduate Studentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, a two-week online compassion module has been explored with undergraduate nursing students (Hofmeyer et al, 2016). This online program is intended to help nursing students gain an understanding of the importance of: compassion in healthcare, being compassionate toward others (patients and colleagues), compassion toward oneself, cultivating resilience, and identifying factors that may hinder or enable compassionate care.…”
Section: Graduate Studentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empathy burnout is described by Hojat (2009) and Johnson (2013) as a type of emotional stress and exhaustion widely experienced by caring professions where high levels of empathy and emotional intelligence are needed. Hofmeyer et al (2016) describes empathy burnout as "…nurses losing their nurturing ability toward patients, toward colleagues, and toward themselves" (p. 203). Symptoms of empathy burnout may include depression, anxiety, irritability, apathy and physical fatigue (Gill, Schaddelee, Ramsey, Turner & Naylor, 2018).…”
Section: Empathy Burnoutmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Griffith and West (2013) noted that self-aware individuals are likely to approach someone when they are struggling with difficult situations or tasks. However, Hofmeyer et al (2016) stated that healthcare employees are likely to care for others, regardless of the potential personal cost to themselves. According to Wood et al (2017) and Engle et al (2017), healthcare employees are predisposed to experience symptoms of compassion fatigue as they operate in a challenging and complex environment where their primary focus is patient care.…”
Section: Self-awarenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hojat (2009) notes that compassion fatigue is a real risk in professions where high levels of empathy and EI are needed. Hofmeyer et al (2016) describe compassion fatigue for nurses as "losing their nurturing ability toward patients, toward colleagues, and toward themselves" (p. 203). Symptoms of compassion fatigue include depression, anxiety, despondency, depersonalising patients, lethargy, lapses in concentration, low self-esteem, irritability, apathy and physical fatigue (Schwerman & Stellmacher, 2012;Slatten, Carson & Carson, 2011;Thompson, 2013).…”
Section: Compassion Fatiguementioning
confidence: 99%