This was a descriptive study to understand the relationship between ethical dilemma and burnout of nurses in hospice palliative care facilities. Data collection was from April 2nd, 2013 to April 12th and the samples were 202 nurses working at hospice palliative care facilities located in two metropo...
This was a descriptive study to understand the relationship between ethical dilemma and burnout of nurses in hospice palliative care facilities. Data collection was from April 2nd, 2013 to April 12th and the samples were 202 nurses working at hospice palliative care facilities located in two metropolitan cities and one city. Nurses’ ethical dilemma was measured with the scale developed by Han(1992) and revised by Yang(2003) and burnout was measured with the scale developed by Maslach & Jackson(1996), translated by Chang(1995), and revised by Kim(2012). Data were analyzed with SPSS Window 20.0, using frequency, percentage, independent t-test, One-way ANOVA, and Pearson's correlation, and Scheffé test. The results of the study were as following. 1. Ethical dilemma was 2.44 (0.33) in average out of 4. 2. Burnout was 2.78 (0.52) in average out of 5. 3. Ethical dilemma exhibited statistically significant difference depending on department and types of training received relevant to hospice palliative care. 4. The degree of burnout turned out to be high in case the sample was younger, unmarried, did not have a religion, graduated with a 4-year bachelor’s degree, had less work experience as a nurse, normal nurses in lower position, shift workers, received lower salary, consult fellow nurses when experiencing ethical dilemma, felt less sense of necessity for ethical dilemma counseling services, did not receive trainings received relevant to hospice palliative care, and did not receive ethics education after graduation. 5. Ethical dilemma had significant but low correlation with burnout(r=.186, p=.008). In conclusion, we were able to discover from this study that net correlation existed between ethical dilemma and burnout of nurses in hospice palliative care facilities. Considering that hospice palliative care is being emphasized as important for terminal cancer patients and has been under the process of systemization, the result of this study can provide basic resources to discover the problem of ethical dilemma and burnout and to resolve the issue.
This was a descriptive study to understand the relationship between ethical dilemma and burnout of nurses in hospice palliative care facilities. Data collection was from April 2nd, 2013 to April 12th and the samples were 202 nurses working at hospice palliative care facilities located in two metropolitan cities and one city. Nurses’ ethical dilemma was measured with the scale developed by Han(1992) and revised by Yang(2003) and burnout was measured with the scale developed by Maslach & Jackson(1996), translated by Chang(1995), and revised by Kim(2012). Data were analyzed with SPSS Window 20.0, using frequency, percentage, independent t-test, One-way ANOVA, and Pearson's correlation, and Scheffé test. The results of the study were as following. 1. Ethical dilemma was 2.44 (0.33) in average out of 4. 2. Burnout was 2.78 (0.52) in average out of 5. 3. Ethical dilemma exhibited statistically significant difference depending on department and types of training received relevant to hospice palliative care. 4. The degree of burnout turned out to be high in case the sample was younger, unmarried, did not have a religion, graduated with a 4-year bachelor’s degree, had less work experience as a nurse, normal nurses in lower position, shift workers, received lower salary, consult fellow nurses when experiencing ethical dilemma, felt less sense of necessity for ethical dilemma counseling services, did not receive trainings received relevant to hospice palliative care, and did not receive ethics education after graduation. 5. Ethical dilemma had significant but low correlation with burnout(r=.186, p=.008). In conclusion, we were able to discover from this study that net correlation existed between ethical dilemma and burnout of nurses in hospice palliative care facilities. Considering that hospice palliative care is being emphasized as important for terminal cancer patients and has been under the process of systemization, the result of this study can provide basic resources to discover the problem of ethical dilemma and burnout and to resolve the issue.
주제어
#Hospice Palliative Care Nurses Ethical Dilemma Burnout
※ AI-Helper는 부적절한 답변을 할 수 있습니다.