Who is at risk for compassion fatigue? An investigation of genetic counselor demographics, anxiety, compassion satisfaction, and burnout.

Whiwon Lee, Patricia McCarthy Veach, Ian M MacFarlane, Bonnie S LeRoy
Author Information
  1. Whiwon Lee: Medical Division, Genzyme Korea Co., Ltd, Seoul, South Korea.

Abstract

Compassion fatigue is a state of detachment and isolation experienced when healthcare providers repeatedly engage with patients in distress. Compassion fatigue can hinder empathy and cause extreme tension. Prior research suggests 73.8 % of genetic counselors are at moderate to high risk for compassion fatigue and approximately 1 in 4 have considered leaving the field as a result Injeyan et al. (Journal of Genetic Counseling, 20, 526-540, 2011). Empirical data to establish a reliable profile of genetic counselors at risk for compassion fatigue are limited. Thus the purpose of this study was to establish a profile by assessing relationships between state and trait anxiety, burnout, compassion satisfaction, selected demographics and compassion fatigue risk in practicing genetic counselors. Practicing genetic counselors (n = 402) completed an anonymous, online survey containing demographic questions, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Professional Quality of Life scale. Multiple regression analysis yielded four significant predictors which increase compassion fatigue risk (accounting for 48 % of the variance): higher levels of trait anxiety, burnout, and compassion satisfaction, and ethnicity other than Caucasian. Additional findings, study limitations, practice implications, and research recommendations are provided.

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MeSH Term

Adult
Anxiety
Burnout, Professional
Compassion Fatigue
Demography
Empathy
Female
Genetic Counseling
Health Personnel
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Personal Satisfaction
Quality of Life
Risk
Surveys and Questionnaires
Workforce
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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