Emotionally Exhausted: Nurses Burned Out and Want to Quit

Nurse Stressed

More than half of nurses caring for children with heart problems experience emotional exhaustion, according to a recent survey. Additionally, the study found a correlation between positive working environments and lower burnout rates.

A survey of nurses caring for children with heart problems has revealed that more than half are emotionally exhausted. The analysis, presented today at ESC Congress 2020, also found that good working environments were linked with less burnout.

“Nurses’ wellbeing is central to ensuring the best outcomes for patients,” said study author Dr. Annamaria Bagnasco of the University of Genoa, Italy. “When wards have poor leadership and fragmented teams with no development prospects for nurses this should raise an alarm that there is a risk of burnout.”

Previous research has shown that burnout rates are higher in pediatrics than in other specialties, and that burnout is connected to patient safety. Strategies to reduce burnout and its impact on patient safety are needed.

This study examined emotional exhaustion in nurses providing routine care on pediatric cardiology wards and whether it was related to the working environment.

Tired Nurse

Data were obtained from the RN4CAST@ITPed study. A web survey was distributed to 2,769 nurses working in children’s hospitals throughout Italy between September 2017 and January 2018. A total of 2,205 (80%) nurses responded, of whom 85 worked in cardiology wards and intensive care units (ICUs). Additional data were collected from hospital administrations. Topics included workload, skill mix, work environment, and emotional exhaustion.

The following definitions were used: Workload referred to how many patients each nurse was caring for (nurse-patient ratio). Skill mix included both the education level of nurses working in one unit and the number of nursing assistants providing support during each shift.

Work environment was measured with the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI), which covers issues such as: having a nurse manager or immediate supervisor who is a good manager and leader; opportunities for advancement; opportunities to participate in policy decisions; and collaboration between nurses and doctors.

Emotional exhaustion was investigated using the Maslach Burnout Inventory, which measures feelings about work. For example, feeling emotionally drained, used up, fatigued in the morning, burned out, frustrated, working too hard, stressed, or “at the end of my rope.”

This analysis focused on responses from the 85 nurses working in cardiology wards and ICUs at five hospitals. Interviews were also conducted with these nurses. More than half (58%) were emotionally exhausted. The main causes were related to working conditions, including being responsible for high numbers of patients and the complexity of caring for sick children.

“The most important consequence was that 30% of the nurses we interviewed wanted to either go and work in another hospital or even change their career,” said Dr. Bagnasco.

The researchers then analyzed the relationship between emotional exhaustion and the working environment. Improving the workplace environment was associated with an 81% fall in emotional exhaustion — even with the same skill mix and nurse-patient ratio.

“Our study shows that nurses value good leadership, being involved in decision-making, having chances to develop their career, and team working,” said Dr. Bagnasco. “The lack of these conditions is connected to burnout, which we know from prior research could compromise patient safety.”

Dr. Bagnasco noted that pediatric cardiac nurses must collaborate with children and their families, who often feel concerned and afraid. She said: “Establishing a trusting relationship is essential but burned out nurses may find it ‘too heavy’ to bear emotionally. If the working environment is positive for the nurses who work in it, children and their families will receive better and safer care.”

Reference: “Relationship between burnout and nursing practice environment in pediatric cardiology: a cross-sectional study” by A Bagnasco, M Zanini, N Dasso, S Rossi, G Catania and L Sasso, 25 November 2020, European Heart Journal.
DOI: 10.1093/ehjci/ehaa946.3405

Funding: Associazione Ospedali Pediatrici Italiani (AOPI) [Italian Association of Pediatric Hospitals

1 Comment on "Emotionally Exhausted: Nurses Burned Out and Want to Quit"

  1. I spent time in pediatric open heart surgery. It is bad enough to be overworked and doing shifts that rotate between 12 hour days and 12 hour nights and never having a holiday on the day it actually occurs but nurses are constantly over assigned to patients. You would have one to one assignments in a sane world. Visitors would not constantly interrupt the nurses’ train of thought as she figures the dosages on mcgs/kg/min and how many mgs to put into how many ccs to give you the right dose. They also would not wake sleeping patients. Nope, they sure wouldn’t. I can think of endless ways to make the patients’ life better that would in turn make the nurses’ life better but it is never going to happen. Nope, too little too late.

Leave a Reply to Bonnie Davis Cancel reply

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.