Transcript
Page 1: Compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction among

RESEARCH ARTICLE Open Access

Compassion fatigue and compassionsatisfaction among palliative care healthproviders: a scoping reviewManal Hassan Baqeas* , Jenny Davis and Beverley Copnell

Abstract

Background: Palliative care can be demanding and stressful for providers. There is increasing recognition in theliterature of the impact of caregiving in palliative care settings, including compassion fatigue and compassionsatisfaction. However, to date this literature has not been systematically reviewed. The purpose of this scopingreview was to map the literature on compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction among palliative care healthproviders caring for adult patients.

Methods: Scoping review method guided by Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines was conducted using fourelectronic databases to identify the relevant studies published with no time limit. Following the title and abstractreview, two reviewers independently screened full-text articles, and extracted study data. A narrative approach tosynthesizing the literature was used.

Results: Twenty studies were included in the review. Five themes emerged from synthesis: conceptualisation ofcompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction; measurement of compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction;consequences of compassion fatigue or compassion satisfaction and providing care for patients with life-threateningconditions; predictors or associated factors of compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction among palliative care healthproviders; and strategies or interventions to support palliative care health providers and reduce compassion fatigue.

Conclusions: Limited studies examined the effectiveness of specific interventions to improve compassion satisfaction andreduce compassion fatigue among palliative care health providers. Further investigation of the impacts of compassionfatigue and compassion satisfaction on palliative care health providers and their work is also needed.

Keywords: Compassion fatigue, Compassion satisfaction, Palliative care, Palliative care health providers, Scoping review

BackgroundPalliative care aims to support people with life-threateningconditions and improve their quality of life [1]. Palliativecare health providers (PCHP) comprise medical, nursing,and allied health care professionals who work in palliativecare settings and who have specific knowledge, skills, andexpertise in providing care for people living with a life lim-iting illness and their families. PCHP can provide direct

care in various settings such as dedicated hospital wards,hospices, and community, and through consultancy to pa-tients in other areas [2].Prolonged contact with these patients predisposes

PCHP to emotional and psychological distress such ascompassion fatigue. There are various definitions ofcompassion fatigue documented in the literature. In gen-eral, compassion fatigue is a term used to describe theexhaustion that results from prolonged exposure tocompassion stress among those who work in a caringprofession [3]. Compassion fatigue is also described as

© The Author(s). 2021 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License,which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you giveappropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate ifchanges were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commonslicence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commonslicence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtainpermission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to thedata made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.

* Correspondence: [email protected] of Nursing and Midwifery, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC 3086,Australia

Baqeas et al. BMC Palliative Care (2021) 20:88 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00784-5

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the diminished ability to feel compassion or empathizewhen providing care. In contrast, compassion satisfac-tion is related to the pleasure derived from alleviation ofpatient suffering and positive work experience [4]. Thereis no consensus in the literature on the dimensions orcomponents of compassion fatigue. However, there is ageneral agreement that compassion fatigue is related toboth burnout (BO) and secondary traumatic stress(STS). While STS is very closely related to compassionfatigue, the nature of the relationship is defined differ-ently and both terms used interchangeably by some au-thors [4]. The concept of compassion satisfaction isrelated to positive work experience, whereas compassionfatigue is associated with physical and emotional exhaus-tion, caused by constant, progressive, and cumulativenegative experiences associated with various clinical set-tings [3, 5, 6]. Compassion fatigue has negative impactson job satisfaction and patient outcomes [7–9]. This em-phasizes the significance of investigating compassion fa-tigue in PCHP.To date, compassion fatigue has been widely studied

in health care providers in a range of settings, as synthe-sized in a recent meta-narrative review [10]. However, toour knowledge, no such synthesis has been undertakenof literature pertaining specifically to PCHP. This gap inthe literature makes it difficult to identify and implementinterventions to support these workers. Therefore, theaim of this scoping review is to synthesize findings fromextant research about compassion fatigue and compas-sion satisfaction among PCHP.

MethodsThe scoping review, as a method, is suitable when thestudy topic is abstract, broad, emerging, or multi-dimensional [11]. Scoping reviews are used to answer abroad question such as “what is known about the studyconcepts?” [11]. It was, therefore, deemed suitable to ad-dress the aim of the current study. It answers the re-search question through a narrative synthesis of theliterature. In addition, it is used to summarize thecurrent knowledge about a topic and identify knowledgegaps regardless of the quality of reviewed studies andtheir design [11].The current scoping review was conducted based on

the guidelines published by the Joanna Briggs Institute(JBI) [12]. These guidelines were developed based on theprevious work by Arksey and O’Malley [13] and Levac,Colquhoun, and O’Brien [14]. In addition, the literaturereview followed the PRISMA-ScR checklist to provideclear details of the search protocol and enhance meth-odological transparency [11]. As per the Joanna BriggsInstitute guidelines, the following five stages werefollowed: 1. Identifying the research question 2. Identify-ing relevant studies 3. Selection of relevant studies 4.

Charting the data 5. Collating, summarizing and report-ing the results [12]. There is a sixth (optional) step thatincludes consultation with key stakeholders. This stepwas omitted, however, and only evidence published inpeer-reviewed literature was included.

Stage 1. Identifying the research questionThis review aims to identify what is known about com-passion fatigue and compassion satisfaction amongPCHP. To address the study aim, the review was con-ducted to answer the following question: “what researchhas been undertaken on compassion fatigue and com-passion satisfaction among palliative care healthproviders?”

Stage 2. Identifying relevant publicationsThe review was conducted by a team of researchers in-cluding the primary researcher, content experts, andmethodological experts. A search of four electronic data-bases: MEDLINE (OVID), CINAHL, PsycInfo, andEMBASE was conducted in August 2019. To ensure acomprehensive search, the search terms “compassion fa-tigue”, “compassion satisfaction”, and “palliative carehealth providers” were initially kept broad and then ex-ploded to cover MeSH terms. In addition, keywords in-cluded in the title and abstract of retrieved papers, andthe keywords used to describe the articles were identi-fied. These keywords were searched across the databases.Finally, the reference lists of the selected articles werehand searched to identify additional studies. The terms“compassion fatigue”, “compassion satisfaction”, and“palliative care health providers” were combined withthe following terms: “burnout, professional”, “stress dis-orders, post-traumatic”, “fatigue, compassion”, “second-ary trauma”, “secondary traumatic stress”, “secondarytraumatization”, “trauma, vicarious”, “traumas, second-ary”, “traumatic stress, secondary”, “burnout, career’,“burnout, occupational”, “burnout, professional”, “sec-ondary post-traumatic stress”, “hospice professionals”,“hospice, palliative care nursing”, “palliative care”, “pal-liative medicine”, “terminal care”, “palliative supportivecare”, and “palliative treatment”. The Boolean operators‘AND’ and ‘OR’ were used to combine various terms andconcepts. All identified sources were stored in the End-Note reference program. Irrelevant records and dupli-cates were excluded from the literature search. The finalscreening of title/abstract and then full text was man-aged in Covidence.Inclusion criteria were: 1. all research designs (e.g.,

quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, and systematicreviews); 2. addressing compassion fatigue and compas-sion satisfaction from the perspectives of PCHP caringfor adult patients in any practice setting; 3. published inEnglish with no date limits applied. Exclusion criteria

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were: 1. grey literature (e.g., book chapters, theses, re-ports, and conference abstracts); 2. Non-research publi-cations (eg editorials; discussion papers; opinion pieces);3. targeting volunteers working in palliative care settings;4. investigating BO without STS or Compassion Fatigue;5. focusing on PCHP working with pediatric patients aswe consider pediatric palliative care has distinct differ-ences from adult palliative care and can be considered aspeciality in its own right [15].

Stage 3. Publication selectionAfter removal of duplicates, article titles and abstractswere screened by two researchers independently. Dis-agreements were discussed and resolved by consensusamong the research team. After full text screening, stud-ies meeting all inclusion criteria were included in thefinal review.

Stage 4. Charting the dataA data extraction table was used to extract the data fromthe included studies. Extracted data included country,year of publication, names of authors, study purpose, re-search design, study sample, and main study findings.The data extraction was conducted by one researcherand reviewed by the research team. Any disagreementsin data extraction were resolved by consensus. Refer-ences were managed utilising EndNote (version X9) andincluded studies were imported to Covidence during thefinal screening. In line with the PRISMA-ScR standards[11], no formal quality appraisal was undertaken as itwas not intended to exclude any paper based on qualityassessment.

Stage 5 data synthesisNarrative synthesis was employed due to the heterogen-eity of the studies. The characteristics of the reviewedstudies (i.e design, sample, settings, main variables, andpublication year) were collated and summarized. Studieswere summarized in a Table and a content analysis wasperformed based on the tabulated data. Then, contentswere translated into main themes. Lastly, the findingswere interpreted and compared with studies from othersettings.

ResultsOverall, the initial search yielded 1822 records. After re-moving duplicates, 1085 records were screened for po-tential relevance by title and abstract. Of these, 921records were found to be irrelevant and 164 full-text ar-ticles were screened. Finally, 144 articles were excludedand 20 articles were included in the final review (Fig. 1).Studies were conducted in different countries worldwide,the majority in a Western setting. Countries representedwere: United States (n = 9), Spain (n = 3), Israel (n = 3),

with one study from each of Australia, Canada, NewZealand, and India. The majority of the studies werepublished within the last 5 years (n = 15). More than halfof the studies were correlational (n = 10), four studieswere qualitative, one a quantitative descriptive study,one a pre-post study with control group, one pre-postwith no control group, two studies examined the psy-chometric properties of the Professional Quality of Life(ProQOL) scale, one paper was a systematic review.Study populations included PCHP from several disci-plines (n = 14), only nurses (n = 3), or only physicians(n = 2).The samples in the included studies were recruited from

various settings that provide palliative care (Table 1). Onestudy was conducted in inpatient hospices and hospitals[20]. One study was conducted in inpatient hospices [21],one in outpatient hospices [1], and one in hospice settingswithout specifying whether inpatient or outpatient [22].One study was conducted in outpatient palliative care set-ting [24]. Eight studies included participants from both in-patient and outpatient settings including hospices [16, 18,19, 23, 28–30, 33]. However, the combination betweeninpatient and outpatient settings in these eight studieswas unclear and not described in detail. Six studiesincluded participants from settings that provide in-patient and outpatient services without stating specif-ically if all participants were recruited from inpatient,outpatient, or both [17, 25–27, 31, 32].

Themes extracted from the included studiesFive main themes were identified in the synthesis of theincluded studies: 1. conceptualisation of compassion fa-tigue and compassion satisfaction; 2. measurement ofcompassion fatigue and satisfaction; 3. consequences ofcompassion fatigue or satisfaction and of providing carefor patients with life-threatening conditions; 4. predic-tors or associated factors of compassion fatigue and sat-isfaction among PCHP; 5. strategies or interventions tosupport PCHP and reduce compassion fatigue. Thesethemes are described further in the following sections.The summary of the included studies is shown inTable 1.

Theme 1- conceptualisation of compassion fatigueOverall, the reviewed studies did not discuss the concep-tualisation of compassion fatigue in depth. Their defin-ition was mainly embedded in that used by themeasurement tool and thus reflects changes in the con-cept over time. Compassion satisfaction was defined bysome studies as a positive consequence of providing carefor acutely ill or traumatised patients (e.g., a sense of ac-complishment and reward) [1, 18, 19, 22, 25, 30, 31].Some studies treated compassion fatigue as a singlediscrete entity with no constitutive components [1, 21].

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On the other hand, some studies treated compassion fa-tigue as being synonymous with STS, and these termswere used interchangeably [20, 31, 32]. The remainingstudies conceptualized compassion fatigue as having twodiscrete components (STS and BO), each of which wasmeasured separately [16, 18, 19, 22, 23, 25, 27–30]. Thequalitative studies did not specify a clear definition ofcompassion fatigue [17, 24, 26, 33].

Theme 2: measurement of compassion fatigue andsatisfactionThe measurement tools used to assess compassion fa-tigue and compassion satisfaction among PCHP in-cluded the 30-item professional quality of life scale(ProQOL) scale, the 20-item compassion fatigue scale(CFS), and the 13-item Compassion Fatigue Short-Scale.The various versions of the ProQOL reflect the changes

in conceptualisation described in the previous section.The ProQOL-V includes two domains of compassionfatigue (composed of BO and STS) and compassionsatisfaction. The ProQOL-IV measures three domains:compassion satisfaction, BO, and compassion fatigue/secondary trauma. The ProQOL-III measures threedomains: compassion satisfaction, BO, and compas-sion fatigue. The 20-item compassion fatigue scale(CFS) is a subscale of the 66-item Compassion Satis-faction/Fatigue Self-Test for Helpers which measurescompassion satisfaction, compassion fatigue, and BO.The 13-item Compassion Fatigue Short-Scale mea-sures compassion fatigue in two dimensions (second-ary trauma and job BO).The most commonly used measure of compassion fa-

tigue and compassion satisfaction among PCHP was theProQOL scale (III, IV, and V versions), which was used

Fig. 1 Flow diagram of search strategy

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Table

1SummaryTableof

Includ

edStud

ies

Autho

rs,Y

ear,an

dCou

ntry

Settings

Design

Sample

Research

Aim

sOutco

mes

Alkem

aet

al.[1],U

SAOutpatient

palliative

care

settings:hom

eho

spicesettings.

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

n=37

Hospice

Profession

als

includ

ing

17Registered

Nurse

5Hom

eHealth

Aide

4SocialWorker

2Vo

lunteerCoo

rdinator

3Bereavem

entProfession

al2Chaplain

1Adm

inistrativeAssistant

2Med

icalDirector

2Other.

Exam

inetherelatio

nships

amon

gself-care,com

passion

fatig

ue,com

passionsatisfac-

tion,andBO

amon

gho

spice

care

workers.

Self-care

strategies

were

associated

with

decreased

levelsof

compassionfatig

ueandBO

andhigh

erlevelsof

compassionsatisfaction.

Barnett,Ru

iz[16],U

SABo

thinpatient

and

outpatient

palliative

care

settings

Inpatient

–ho

spices,

hospitals,nursing

homes,other

long

-term

care

facilities,

Outpatient

–ho

me

healthcare.

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

90ho

spicenu

rses.

Tostud

ytheroleof

self-

esteem

inmed

iatin

gtherela-

tionshipbe

tweencompassion

fatig

ueandpsycho

logicald

is-

tressam

ongho

spicenu

rses.

Psycho

logicald

istresscan

decrease

self-esteem

,and

thereb

yincrease

theriskof

compassionfatig

ue.

Bessen

etal.[17],USA

Med

icalcentre

–un

ableto

determ

ine

ifinclud

esbo

thinpatient

and

outpatient

settings.

Qualitative(sem

i-structured

interviews)

13ph

ysicians.

Tode

scrib

ecompassionate

care

provisionby

physicians

durin

gen

d-of-life

care.

Therewerevariablewaysfor

deliveringcompassionate

care.

Physicians

need

training

inen

d-of-life

care

toovercome

somebarriersof

providing

care

onorganizatio

naland

in-

dividu

allevel.

Frey

etal.[18],New

Zealand

Inpatient

–ho

spital,

hospice,reside

ntial

aged

care,

Outpatient

–ho

spital,

commun

ityho

spice,

districtnu

rsing,

gene

ralp

ractice,

othe

rcommun

ityservices.

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

256registered

nurses.

ToinvestigateBO

and

compassionfatig

ueandtheir

associated

factorsam

ong

nurses

inNew

Zealand.

BOne

gativelyassociated

with

psycho

logicalempo

wermen

t&commitm

ent&challeng

ecompo

nentsof

psycho

logical

hardiness.STSne

gatively

associated

with

palliativecare

education.

Com

passionsatisfaction

positivelyassociated

with

palliativecare

education,

psycho

logicalempo

wermen

t,&bo

thcommitm

ent&

challeng

ecompo

nentsof

psycho

logicalh

ardine

ss.

Galiana

etal.[19],Braziland

Spain.

Inpatient

and

outpatient

palliative

care

settings

includ

ingho

spice

(Hom

e-based

Psycho

metrics

Brazil/

(n=161)

Spain/

(n=385)

PCHPinclud

ingdo

ctors,

nurses,p

sycholog

ists,nursing

assistants,socialw

orkersand

Toassess

thereliabilityand

validity

oftheSpanishandthe

Portug

uese

versions

ofthe

ProQ

OLscale.

Both

SpanishandPo

rtug

uese

versions

oftheProQ

OLshow

good

psycho

metric

prop

erties.

Baqeas et al. BMC Palliative Care (2021) 20:88 Page 5 of 13

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Table

1SummaryTableof

Includ

edStud

ies(Con

tinued)

Autho

rs,Y

ear,an

dCou

ntry

Settings

Design

Sample

Research

Aim

sOutco

mes

palliativecare

Social-health

center

unitpalliativecare

Hospitalsup

port

team

Hospice

Oncolog

yun

itIntensivetreatm

ent

unit

Pediatricsun

itof

palliativecare

Others)

othe

r.(Individu

alproviders

numbe

rno

tspecified

)

Heeteret

al.[20],USA

Inpatient

hospiceand

hospitalp

alliative

care

settings

(Pre-Post)on

egrou

p36

Hospice

andPC

HP

includ

ingnu

rses,m

anagers

from

therespectiveho

me

hospiceandpalliativecare

units,p

hysicians,clerical,aides,

socialworkers,and

othe

rs.

(Individu

alprovidersnu

mbe

rno

tspecified

)

Exam

inetheeffectsof

6-week

techno

logy-assistedmed

itatio

nprog

ram

onem

otionalaware-

ness,com

passionfatig

ue,and

BO

The6-weektechno

logy-

assisted

med

itatio

ntechno

logy

successfullyredu

cedcompas-

sion

fatig

ue/BOandincreased

emotionalawaren

essam

ong

thestud

yparticipants.

Hillet

al.[10]

Vario

ussettings

System

aticReview

547PC

HPacross

9stud

ies

Toexploretheeffectiven

essof

interven

tions

used

toen

hance

psycho

logicalw

ellbeing

ofpalliativecare

staff.

Few

interven

tions

werehe

lpful

tosupp

ortpalliativecare

staff

andim

provetheirwell-b

eing

.

Hilliard

[21],U

SAInpatient

palliative

care

settings:hospice

Twogrou

pspre-po

st-

testgrou

pn=17

nurses,socialw

orkers,

andchaplains(Individu

alprovidersnu

mbe

rno

tspecified

)

Toexam

inetheeffectiven

ess

ofmusictherapyto

redu

cecompassionfatig

ueand

improveteam

buildingof

hospiceworkers.

Musictherapywas

effectiveto

improveteam

buildingbu

tno

tredu

cecompassion

fatig

ue.

Hotchkiss

[22],U

SAHospice

settings

from

VITA

S®Health

care

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

324Hospice

care

profession

als

includ

ing

68Registered

nurse

60Chaplain

48Socialworker

40Hom

ehe

alth

aid

28Licensed

vocatio

naln

urse

20Adm

inistrative

16Managem

ent

14Nurse

practitione

rs8Ph

ysician

4Musictherapists

18Other

Exam

inetherelatio

nship

betw

eencompassion

satisfaction,BO

,STS,and

mindful

self-care

Participantshadhigh

levelsof

self-care

andcompassionsatis-

factionandlow

levelsof

STS

andBO

.Self-carestrategies

canim

provecompassion

satisfaction.

Kaur

etal.[23],India

Inpatient

and

Outpatient

palliative

care

settings

includ

ingho

spice

(hospitaland

hospice

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

65PC

HPinclud

ingdo

ctor,

nurse,coun

selor,psycho

logist,

socialworker,ph

armacist,or

physiotherapist.(Individu

alnu

mbe

rno

tspecified

).

Toexploretheprofession

alqu

ality

oflifeam

ongPC

HP.

Theauthorsconclude

dthat

implem

entin

gspecific

interven

tions

couldbe

helpful

toredu

ceSTSandBO

and

enhancecompassion

Baqeas et al. BMC Palliative Care (2021) 20:88 Page 6 of 13

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Table

1SummaryTableof

Includ

edStud

ies(Con

tinued)

Autho

rs,Y

ear,an

dCou

ntry

Settings

Design

Sample

Research

Aim

sOutco

mes

atcancer

palliative

care

centers)

satisfactionam

ongPC

HP.

Melvin[24],U

SAOutpatient

palliative

care

settings:hom

ehe

alth

agen

cy

Qualitative(sem

i-structured

interviews)

6palliativecare

nurses

Assessprevalen

ceof

compassionfatig

ue,its

conseq

uences,and

metho

dsof

coping

with

itam

ong

palliativecare

nurses.

Com

passionfatig

uehad

negativeph

ysicaland

emotionalh

ealth

impactson

palliativecare

nurses.

Mon

tross-Thom

aset

al.[25],

USA

Can

notde

term

ine

theparticipantswere

recruitedon

line

throug

ha

mem

bershiplist

serveof

theNational

Hospice

andPalliative

CareOrganization

(NHPC

O).All

participantswere

hospicestaffor

volunteerswho

were

emailedade

scrip

tion

ofthestud

yanda

Survey

Mon

keylink

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

390ho

spicestaffand

volunteers(Individu

alprovidersno

tspecified

)

Toinvestigatetheroleof

practicingritualsto

improve

profession

alqu

ality

oflife

amon

gho

spicecare

providers

Hospice

care

providerswho

practiceritualswerefoun

dto

have

better

profession

alqu

ality

oflife.

MotaVargas

etal.[26],

Spain

Can

notde

term

ine

(purpo

sefulsam

ple)

Qualitative(sem

i-structured

individu

alinterviews)

10PC

HPinclud

enu

rses,

doctorsandpsycho

logists.

Individu

alprovidersnu

mbe

rno

tspecified

).

Tode

scrib

eexpe

riences

ofpalliativecare

workersover

time

PCHPwerefoun

dto

gothroug

hvario

usph

ases

durin

gtheirprofession

allife.

O’Mahon

yet

al.[27],USA

Can

notde

term

ine

Participantswere

recruitedfro

ma

grou

pof

70profession

als

participatingin

acontinuing

education

prog

ram

onpalliative

med

icinein

Midwest

Acade

micMed

ical

Cen

ter

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

66PC

HPinclud

ingph

ysicians,

nurses,chaplains,social

workers,and

other.(Individu

alprovidersnu

mbe

rno

tspecified

)

Exam

inetherelatio

nship

betw

eenpe

rson

ality

traitsand

compassionfatig

uein

PCHP.

Neuroticism

was

associated

with

STSandBO

.Agreeablene

sswas

associated

with

compassionsatisfaction.

Expe

riencein

palliativecare

was

associated

with

lower

levelsof

BOandincreased

levelsof

compassion

satisfaction.

Samson,Shvartzm

an[28],

Israel

Both

inpatient

and

outpatient

palliative

care

settings

(hospital-b

ased

and/

orho

me-basedpallia-

tivecare

units)

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

144PC

HPinclud

ing

47Ph

ysicians

97Nurses

Toiden

tifytheassociation

betw

eenSTSand

peritraum

aticdissociatio

nam

ongpalliativeworkers.

STSwas

foun

dto

besign

ificantlycorrelated

with

clinicallevelsof

peritraum

atic

dissociatio

nam

ongpalliative

workers.

Samson,Shvartzm

an[29],

Israel

Both

inpatient

and

outpatient

palliative

care

settings

(end

-of-

Quantitative(Cross

sectionalsurvey)

241participantsproviding

palliativecare

andprim

ary

care

includ

ing

Toassess

therelatio

nship

betw

eenexpo

sure

tode

ath

anddyingandprofession

al

Therewas

asign

ificant

relatio

nshipbe

tweenexpo

sure

tode

athanddyingand

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Table

1SummaryTableof

Includ

edStud

ies(Con

tinued)

Autho

rs,Y

ear,an

dCou

ntry

Settings

Design

Sample

Research

Aim

sOutco

mes

lifecommun

ity-and

hospital-b

ased

pallia-

tivecare

units)

84Ph

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Baqeas et al. BMC Palliative Care (2021) 20:88 Page 8 of 13

Page 9: Compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction among

in 11 studies [1, 18, 20, 22, 23, 25, 27–29, 31, 32]. Thisscale measures compassion satisfaction, STS, and BO.The items of each subscale are rated on a five-pointLikert-type scale. The scale has demonstrated excellentpsychometric properties with Cronbach’s alpha of 0.80or more for its subscales [4].The Compassion Fatigue Scale (CFS) was used in only

one study [21] which was a pre-post study. This tool isdistinguished from the other tools by focusing more onthe helper and working environment. In addition, theCompassion Fatigue Short-Scale was used in one study[16]. This tool measures only compassion fatigue. Boththe 20-item CFS and the 13-item CFS were reported tohave adequate reliability and validity [16, 21]. Therefore,all of the three tools have been utilised internationallywith various populations. Apart from the psychometricproperties of these three measurement tools, authors didnot report any other evidence about their efficacy. Inaddition, they did not provide a rationale for their choiceof these tools in their studies.Four studies reported the levels of compassion fatigue

and compassion satisfaction among PCHP. All four usedthe professional quality of life scale (ProQOL) scale. Inthe study of Frey et al., [18] about half (48.4%) of pallia-tive care nurses had moderate to high levels of compas-sion satisfaction. However, about a quarter of theparticipants had high BO scores (26.8%) and more thanhalf (51.6%) had moderate STS [18]. O’Mahony et al.[27] found that palliative medicine physicians had overallhigh levels of compassion satisfaction and low levels ofBO and STS. Alkema, Linton, and Davies [1] found thatthe mean scores of compassion satisfaction, BO, andcompassion fatigue among hospice professionals were inthe average range. Finally, Kaur, Sharma, and Chaturvedireported that, among palliative care providers, 49.2% hadan average level of compassion satisfaction, 53.8% hadan average level of BO, while 95.4% scored above 75thpercentile on STS [23].

Theme 3: consequences of compassion fatigueTwo studies, both qualitative, reported consequences ofcompassion fatigue among their findings. A study con-ducted by Melvin reported that providing palliative careand working with dying patients could contribute tocompassion fatigue among PCHP [24]. The author alsosuggests that providing palliative care and working withdying patients could contribute to physical and emo-tional consequences. PCHP reported feeling responsiblefor patient care even after going home and leaving theworkplace [24]. In addition to compassion fatigue, work-ing with dying patients likely affects many dimensionsconcerning mental health including feelings of guilt, sad-ness, crying, thinking of death, remembering personalexperiences with death, isolation, and grief [33].

Theme 4: predictors or associated factors of compassionfatigue and satisfactionEleven articles provided data about the correlates of highlevels of compassion fatigue and poor compassion satis-faction among PCHP. In general, studies included PCHPfrom several disciplines. However, two studies had onlynurse samples and one study had both physician andnurse samples. The synthesis of these studies is includedbelow.In general, demographic, personal, and organisational

factors were associated with compassion fatigue andcompassion satisfaction among PCHP. Demographic fac-tors were found to be associated with compassion fa-tigue in some studies. Slocum-Gori et al. [32] found thatemployment status was associated with compassion fa-tigue as part-time workers had lower scores than thosewho worked full time. Additionally, they found thatgreater experience in palliative care was associated withlower levels of BO. O’Mahony et al. [27] supported theseresults and found that duration of experience in pallia-tive care was associated with higher levels of compassionsatisfaction.Personal factors were found to be associated with

compassion fatigue in several studies. For example, hav-ing a neuroticism personality trait was associated withincreased levels of STS and BO among PCHP, while hav-ing an agreeableness personality trait was associated withincreased levels of compassion satisfaction [27]. Inaddition, psychological hardiness (e.g., commitment andchallenge) were associated with lower BO and greatercompassion satisfaction [18]. Furthermore, practicingsome personal rituals on specific occasions was associ-ated with lower BO and more compassion satisfactionamong hospice staff [25]. Also, the ability to cope withdeath was associated with lower levels of compassion fa-tigue and BO and higher compassion satisfaction amongPCHP [31]. Greater exposure to death was also signifi-cantly correlated with STS among physicians and nursesemployed in a palliative care unit [29]. In addition, highlevels of dissociation (detachment) were associated withhigher levels of STS [28]. Psychological distress was alsoassociated with increased compassion fatigue [16]. Fur-ther, using self-care strategies was associated with lowerlevels of compassion fatigue and BO and higher levels ofcompassion satisfaction [1]. Further, mindful self-carewas associated with more compassion satisfaction andless risk of BO among health care workers in the pallia-tive care setting [22].Frey et al. found that organizational factors such as

work-related empowerment could decrease BO levels[18]. Furthermore, the authors found that STS was nega-tively associated with previous palliative care education[18]. Kaur et al. concluded that receiving training in pal-liative care was associated with lower levels of BO and

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STS [23]. Kaur et al. found that professional orientationwas associated with compassion satisfaction, with nursesscoring lower levels than other health professionals [23].Slocum-Gori et al. [32] found that compassion fatiguewas negatively correlated with compassion satisfactionand positively correlated with BO.

Theme 5: strategies or interventions to support PCHP orreduce compassion fatigueIn one systematic review, Hill et al. identified multipleinterventions reported to improve wellbeing of PCHP;however, most were found to be ineffective in reducingcompassion fatigue [34]. Examples of these interventionsinclude cognitive training, education, relaxation, andsupport [34]. Two of the included studies evaluated in-terventions to reduce compassion fatigue among PCHP.The first study by Heeter, Lehto, Allbritton, Day andWiseman examined the effectiveness of a 6-week medi-tation program delivered via smartphone apps to reducecompassion fatigue among 36 PCHP [20]. The singlegroup pre and post-test study design reported a signifi-cant reduction in compassion fatigue after the interven-tion [20]. Another study conducted by Hilliard [21]investigated the effectiveness of a music therapy inter-vention to reduce compassion fatigue in a sample of 17hospice workers. Participants were randomly assigned toan ecological music therapy group and a didactic musictherapy group. A pre-and post-test was performed tomeasure compassion fatigue levels. The results indicatedno significant differences in compassion fatigue betweenpre-and post-test scores of compassion fatigue in eithergroup [21].Four qualitative studies reported strategies to support

PCHP from the perspectives of the study participants[17, 24, 26, 33]. These studies did not actually measurethe effectiveness of these strategies. However, the re-searchers interviewed PCHP and asked them to liststrategies they believed helped to protect them fromcompassion fatigue. Palliative care nurses in the study byMelvin described adopting various strategies includingsetting professional boundaries, seeking support fromcolleagues and supervisors, reflection, physical exercise,and social activities out of work [24]. In the study ofMota Vargas et al. researchers interviewed PCHP andasked them to identify the self-care strategies they used[26]. Participants reported that reflecting on their experi-ence of providing palliative care, understanding themethods used to enhance self-control, and acknowledg-ing one’s limits and accepting the fact that many thingscannot be changed and learning to live with them werethe most commonly used strategies. Other self-carestrategies included attending training in palliative care,improving their communication skills, and developingpersonal hobbies [26]. Zambrano, Chur-Hansen, and

Crawford reported that PCHP highlighted supportivemeasures such as finding spiritual meaning, receivingsupport, and using both problem-focused and emotion-focused coping strategies [33]. Bessen, Jain, Brooks et al.reported that physicians described sharing experienceswith their colleagues or using individual-based strategies(e.g., improving self-awareness) to prevent compassionfatigue [17].

DiscussionThis scoping review mapped available evidence on com-passion fatigue and compassion satisfaction amongPCHP in various palliative care settings. The currentscoping review included all relevant studies regardless ofthe publication year but the majority that met inclusioncriteria were published within the last 5 years (n = 16).This suggests that interest in compassion fatigue andcompassion satisfaction in the field of palliative care isincreasing.Themes that emerged in this review were also reported

by previous reviews focusing on other health profes-sionals in non-palliative care settings. In a meta-narrative review related to compassion fatigue in healthliterature, the main themes that emerged were related topredictors/risk factors of compassion fatigue, its conse-quences, conceptualization, and measurement [10]. An-other review related to compassion fatigue in cancercare providers included themes related to compassionfatigue prevalence, measurement, and management [35].These reviews reported various predictors/risk factorsand consequences of compassion fatigue that are, tosome extent, similar to these reported in the currentstudy.Findings in our review suggest a general agreement

that compassion satisfaction reflects a sense of accom-plishment and reward of providing care for patients [1,18, 19, 22, 25, 30, 31]. However, there was no consensuson the definition of compassion fatigue in palliative caresettings. While some studies treated compassion fatigueas a single discrete entity, or synonymous with STS [20,31, 32], it was considered a multi-dimensional conceptby others [16, 18, 19, 22, 23, 25, 27–30]. The multi-dimensionality of compassion fatigue is further compli-cated because it is informed by different theories that in-form the definition of compassion fatigue [10, 36]. Thisrenders the development of a unified meaning of com-passion fatigue difficult. This also resulted in the vari-ability of the domains or subscales of the measures usedto assess compassion fatigue. Most of the included stud-ies used the ProQOL scale which assessed BO and STSas components of compassion fatigue rather than report-ing an overall score for compassion fatigue.Compassion is a central concept for PCHP who pro-

vide care for people with life limiting conditions. The

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more empathic a palliative care provider becomes, themore likely compassion fatigue will occur. Therefore, itis important to educate PCHP to modify empatheticability in response to prolonged work with patientsneeding palliative care. The human nervous system playsan important role in regulating the empathetic responseof the individual. Recent literature has shown that em-pathy is influenced by nervous system stimulation and itmay lead to empathic distress [37].The literature review revealed various organizational

factors (e.g., work-related empowerment, receiving train-ing in palliative care, and being recognized as a palliativecare nurse) and demographic factors (e.g., employmentstatus as part-time workers or full time and experiencein palliative care) associated with compassion fatigueand compassion satisfaction across PCHP. Further, itwas noted that some personal factors associated withcompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction werenonmodifiable (e.g., neuroticism personality trait andpsychological hardiness). Additional factors includedpersonal variables such as practicing some personal rit-uals, the ability to cope with death and self-care, levelsof dissociation, using self-care strategies and mindfulself-care. Therefore, it can be concluded that compas-sion fatigue and compassion satisfaction are predicted bymany factors, some of which may not be modifiable.The majority of studies included participants from

multiple work settings (hospital, hospice and community)and none compared findings across settings or attemptedto differentiate between them. Given that work in the vari-ous settings can vary considerably, the incidence and ex-perience of compassion fatigue may also vary. Futureresearch should explore the impact of work setting oncompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction.Receiving palliative care training or education was

found to help reduce the likelihood of developing symp-toms of compassion fatigue [18, 23, 38]. None of thesestudies explored the content of education programs toidentify which aspects induced this effect. Studies in non-palliative care settings have investigated training programsspecifically focused on reducing or preventing compassionfatigue. For example, in a Pre- Post- test study conductedto examine the effect of Mindful Self-Compassion (MSC)training on compassion fatigue and resilience amongnurses working in various settings, there was a significantreduction in the scores of secondary trauma and BO afterthe intervention [39]. Another study reported a significantreduction in participants’ compassion fatigue and BO andimprovement in compassion satisfaction after CompassionFatigue Specialist Training for mental health professionals[40]. It would seem likely given the nature of palliativecare work that specialist education programs would in-clude a focus on similar self-care activities; an examinationof the curricula of these programs would be useful in

explicating this content. We recommend that PCHPundergo specific education/training in this area, whetherthrough formal programs or continuing professionaldevelopment.A number of interventions have been shown to reduce

compassion fatigue and improve compassion satisfactionacross a wide range of populations [39, 40]. However,few intervention studies were conducted specific to thefield of palliative care. Only two of the included studiesin this review involved interventions and measured theireffectiveness to mitigate compassion fatigue and improvecompassion satisfaction among PCHP. Only one of thetested interventions (The 6-week technology-assistedmeditation) was found to be effective in reducing com-passion fatigue. Despite this, many descriptive or correl-ational studies pointed to such interventions. Otherstudies investigated strategies to support PCHP usingself-report data with correlational or qualitative ap-proaches rather than actually implementing these strat-egies or measuring their effectiveness [17, 24, 26, 33].Therefore, most of the knowledge regarding the inter-ventions used to mitigate compassion fatigue and im-prove compassion satisfaction among PCHP is informedby low level evidence. Furthermore, while there is someoverlap between palliative care and other health carespecialties, there are also aspects that are unique to pal-liative care. Therefore, it cannot be assumed that re-search undertaken in other specialty areas can beapplied to PCHP, and we recommend interventions betested in this population.

Strengths and limitationsThe strengths of this review include conducting a com-prehensive search with no limits on publication dates. Inaddition, studies that used concepts related to compas-sion fatigue but did not examine the concept directly(e.g., empathy, moral distress) were excluded from theliterature search to make the search methodology morerigorous. Nevertheless, the review has some limitations.First, some relevant studies may have been missed des-pite using a rigorous search strategy. This could occurdue to the complexity of compassion fatigue terms andinconsistencies in its conceptualisation across differentstudies. Second, only publications written in Englishwere included which limits generalisability and mayintroduce language bias. The limited number of studiesexamining compassion fatigue in palliative care settingsmay warrant conducting a broad search in all languages.Grey literature was excluded, which may introduce pub-lication bias.The results of this review highlight a gap in the litera-

ture examining impacts of compassion fatigue and com-passion satisfaction on PCHP. This gap in the literaturedemonstrates the need for further research on the

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impacts of compassion fatigue and compassion satisfac-tion on PCHP. Therefore, as nurses make up a signifi-cant proportion of the palliative care health providerworkforce, we recommend exploring the impact ofcompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction onproductivity among palliative care nurses. Targeting ahomogeneous sample of nurses is also recommendedsince the included studies predominantly involvedheterogenous samples of PCHP rather than specificallynurses. Research is also required to understand whetherand how the experience of compassion fatigue and com-passion satisfaction may vary across different work envi-ronments. In addition, there is a need to conductinterventional studies to identify the most effective strat-egies, including education or training, to reduce compas-sion fatigue among PCHP.

ConclusionThis review sought to identify current evidence aboutcompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction amongPCHP. Most of the studies investigating the impacts ofcompassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction onPCHP were descriptive in nature. This indicates a gap inthe literature that needs more investigation. Only onestudy identified an effective intervention to reduce com-passion fatigue in PCHP. Most of the reviewed studieswere correlational or exploratory in nature which affectsthe quality and strength of the retrieved evidence. Oneimportant aspect to be considered is the impact of com-passion fatigue and compassion satisfaction on the prod-uctivity of PCHP and their ability to provide safe andcompassionate care. This is an important topic especiallyamong palliative care nurses since they are the largestgroup of PCHP and they spend a long time caring forpeople with life-threatening conditions and relatedtrauma. The current work suggests a need to fill variousgaps in knowledge and provides a clear direction for fu-ture research.

AbbreviationsPCHP: Palliative care health providers; BO: Burnout; STS: Secondary traumaticstress; ProQOL: Professional quality of life; CFS: Compassion fatigue scale

AcknowledgementsWe would like to thank Ms. Elizabeth Lawrence for her contributions todeveloping the search strategy for this manuscript.

Authors’ contributionsMB and BC conceived the study. MB developed the search strategy,conducted the initial literature search, and contributed to the writing of themanuscript. BC and MB extracted and screened articles. BC and JD providedsubstantive expertise, oversaw all stages of the review, provided expertise tothe review and analysis process, and critically revised the manuscript. Allauthors approved the final version of the manuscript.

FundingMB was supported by a scholarship from the Ministry of Higher EducationSaudi Arabia. The funding body had no involvement in the design or

conduct of the study, nor in the writing of the manuscript. No other fundingwas received.

Availability of data and materialsData used in this manuscript consist of published articles which cannot beshared by the authors for copyright reasons but are available throughsubscription to the relevant journals/databases.

Declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participateNot applicable; no original data.

Consent for publicationNot applicable; no details, images, or videos relating to individual personsincluded.

Competing interestsThe author(s) declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to themanuscript, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Received: 8 August 2020 Accepted: 1 June 2021

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