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The effect of narrative nursing intervention on job burnout of nurses |
WU Binbin, LEI Xuezhen, LUO Hong, FENG Yaping, SHAO Ganqin |
Department of Cardiovascular Internal Medicine, the Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou 310015, China |
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Cite this article: |
WU Binbin,LEI Xuezhen,LUO Hong, et al. The effect of narrative nursing intervention on job burnout of nurses[J]. JOURNAL OF WEZHOU MEDICAL UNIVERSITY, 2020, 50(8): 677-679.
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Abstract Objective: To explore the impact of narrative care on nurses in clinical care work. Methods: From January to June 2018, a group of 88 nurses from each ward of the Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University underwent a six-month group narrative nursing intervention. Before and after the intervention, the Mars burnout scale was used to evaluate the nurses, and the differences in nurse burnout before and after the intervention were compared. Results: After the intervention, the scores of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, low sense of achievement and positive proportion of nurses all decreased compared with those before the intervention (P<0.05). The proportion of mild, moderate and severe job burnout among nurses decreased after the intervention compared with that before the intervention (χ2=3.769, P=0.049). Conclusion: The application of narrative care in clinical nursing work can effectively reduce the occurrence of nurse burnout.
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[1] |
. [J]. JOURNAL OF WEZHOU MEDICAL UNIVERSITY, 2013, 43(4): 275-276. |
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