Title: Care for the Caregiver: Assessing and Addressing the
1Care for the Caregiver Assessing and Addressing
the Cost of Caring
- Mary Lou OGorman, MDiv, BCC
- Executive Director of Pastoral Care and CPE
- Saint Thomas Health
- Nashville, Tennessee
- mogorman_at_stthomas.org
2Objectives
- Describe the causes, symptoms and impact of moral
distress, compassion fatigue, burnout and other
sources of staff distress. - Describe the cultural, organizational,
professional and personal factors that contribute
to that distress. - Identify strategies and best practices that
provide care for the caregiver.
3The Schwartz Center April 2013
- Burnout suffered by
- More than a third of nurses
- More than a quarter of physicians
- Numbers are increasing
- Caregivers need
- Support, opportunities to share
- Joys and challenges
- Time for patient/family interactions
- Their health and wellbeing to be valued
4Continuum?
Moral Distress
Compassion Fatigue
GriefOut
PTSD
Burn Out
Vicarious Traumatization
5Moral Distress Defined
- the pain or anguish affecting the mind, body or
relationships in response to a situation in which
the person is aware of a moral problem,
acknowledges moral responsibility, and makes a
moral judgment about the correct action yet as a
result of real or perceived constraints,
participates in perceived moral wrongdoing. - Alvita Nathaniel MSN, RNCS
- In Nursing World, July 28, 2002
6moral distress defined
- Painful feelings and/or the psychological
disequilibrium that occurs when one knows the
right thing to do, but institutional constraints
make it nearly impossible to pursue the right
course of action. - Jameton A. Nursing Practice The Ethical Issues.
NJPrentiss-Hall. 1984
7moral distress defined
- 1993 Jameton distinguished
- Initial frustration, anger and anxiety due to
- Institutional obstacles
- Interpersonal conflict about values
- Reactive due to failure to address initial
distress - 2000 Webster and Baylis included
- Failure to pursue right course of action due to
- Error in judgment
- Personal failing
- Circumstances beyond control
- May feel cherished beliefs violated
- Compromised integrity
8distress
- Burn out
- Individual or group stress related to ones
relationship with the work environment. - Feel overwhelmed.
- Compassion fatigue
- Gradual lessening, over time of ability to be
compassionate. - The price one pays for caring.
- Emotional stress experienced from exposure to the
suffering of others.
9distress
- Secondary Traumatic Stress (STS)
- Presence of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
in the caregiver. - Due to relationship and/or proximity.
- Both STS and CF are caused by exposure to
patients who have been traumatized or are
suffering, not to the traumatic event itself. - Vicarious traumatization
10It's possible I am pushing through solid rockin
flintlike layers, as the ore lies, aloneI am
such a long way in I see no way through,and no
space everything is close to my face,and
everything close to my face is stone. I don't
have much knowledge yet in grief --so this
massive darkness makes me small.You be the
master make yourself fierce, break inthen
your great transforming will happen to me,and my
great grief cry will happen to you.
-Rilke
11Other/Related Distress
- Grief out
- Repeated, sustained and often unresolved grief
and loss. - Jading
- Process leading to exhaustion from being
overdriven to perform long, continued labor
and/or severe or tedious tasks. Leaves one angry,
even mean.
12Continuum?
Moral Distress
Compassion Fatigue
GriefOut
PTSD
Burn Out
Vicarious Traumatization
13Caregiving A Moral Endeavor
- Practice
- Fundamentally ethical
- Roots of the caring professions
- Hotel Dieu House of God
- Nursing The Finest Art. An Illustrated History
- Promotion of ideal patient care
- Respect for persons
- Role as advocate
- Safe and best care
- Caregiver-patient relationship is complex
- Patient focused caring
- Some distress is unavoidable
14Constraints/Barriers
- Organizational
- Professional
- Personal
15Organizational Barriers
- Hospitals/other settings
- Biomedical focus
- Technology
- Lack of time
- Failure of team
- Leadership dynamics
- Lack of collaboration
- Conflict
- Patient/client with sudden, critical illness
- Wishes unknown
- Sustained proximity when others walk away
16Contributing Factors
- Cure orientation
- Technology
- Death a failure
- Discomfort with own mortality
- Belief doing everything a sign of faithfulness
- Staffing
- Insufficient
- Novice staff
- High patients acuity
17Professional Barriers
- Staffing
- So low, care is inadequate
- Lack of time, skill
- Novice staff
- Multiple deaths in close succession
- High patient/client acuity
- Organizational change
- Quality, safety
- Cost-cutting Doing more with less
- Leadership dynamics
- Effectiveness of team
- Power imbalance
- Lack of collaboration
18.professional
- Role and relevance questions
- Limited role in decision making
- Belief that decisions contradict best interests
- Confusion about plan
- Communication failures
- In team, between teams
- Too many partners or consultants
- Patient and/or family
- Technological imperative/futility
- Doing everything vs. the right thing
- Belief doing everything a sign of faithfulness
- Death a failure
- Discomfort with own mortality
19.professional
- Nature of relationships
- Closeness/identification
- Dynamics with patient and/or family
- Conflict
- Assertive/aggressive patients/clients and
families - Intra or interdisciplinary conflict
- Outside pressures
- Organizational, professional, personal
- Economy
- Politics
- Sustained proximity when others walk away
20Personal
- Psychological/emotional
- Closeness/identification with patient/client
- Boundaries
- Isolation
- Feelings of powerlessness or helplessness
- Feelings of failure or guilt
- Inability to talk about feelings
21personal
- Grief and Loss
- Lack of time to process
- Accumulated grief and loss
- Lack of closure
- Compromise of ones standard of care
- Inadequate staffing
- Inability to meet perceived needs of patient
- Lack of resources, services
- Futility
22Symptoms of Distress
- Fatigue
- Emotional, physical
- Somatic concerns
- Diet, sleep, physical illness
- Absenteeism
- Poor or inappropriate care
- Recipients of care
- Self
- Feelings of inadequacy
- Personal, professional
- Feeling victimized
23symptoms of distress
- Irritability, anger, insults, resentment,
conflicts - Anxiety
- Frustration
- Depression
- Blaming others
- See self as having lost
- Integrity
- Authenticity
- Distancing oneself
- Isolation
- Friends, family
- Colleagues
- Loss of meaning
- Crisis of faith
24Addressing Distress
- Cause analysis
- Self awareness/self monitoring
- Limits, issues
- Address issues in real time
- Debriefing
- Talk about it
- Ethical decision-making
- Referral
- Skill-building
- Grief work
25addressing distress
- Engage in work of letting go
- At the bedside
- Funerals, journal, phone calls
- Sacred/holy
- Story telling
- Self-care
- Balance
- Spiritual practice
- Therapy
- Find own voice/Advocacy
- Courage
- Develop sources of support
- Professional relationships
- Social relationships
- Play
26Resources to Address StaffDistress
- Spiritual nurture provided on a regular basis
- Staff follow-up
- Support Groups
- CISM
- Schwartz Rounds
- Provide places of sanctuary
27To heal a person, one must first be a person.
28Healing Teams/Environments
- Interdisciplinary/Collaborative
- Role modeling
- Mentoring
- Skill building and education
- Conversation
- Affirmation of positive
- Encouraging when negative
- Flexible and creative
- Trusting environment
- Safe place to talk
- Bereavement
- Strong leader
29Effective Organizations
30Organizational Obligations
- Recurring issues/systemic causes of moral
distress identified and monitored - Corrective action
- Adequate financial and people resources
- Ethics resources
- Palliative care
- Conflict resolution
- Interdisciplinary forums to discuss complex
situations - Mechanisms to address futile care
- Accountability for practice and behavior
- Skill building, education, mentoring
- Bereavement mechanism
- Areas where death is frequent
- Opportunities for breaks and places of Sanctuary
31Chaplains
- Needed skills to address staff distress
- Are involved in clinical arena
- Accessible
- Part of the team
- Incarnate the presence of the Source of all Hope
- Ministry to care providers is part of the job
description
32Pastoral Leadership
- Advocates for patients wishes and goals
- Develops and maintains strong team relationships
- Possesses strong communication skills
- Possesses skill in ethical decision-making and in
conflict resolution - Attends and participates in significant
patient/family conferences - Uses appropriate referrals to address issues
- Is courageous
33QUESTIONS?