Workplace stress in nursing: a literature review
Abstract
Stress perception is highly subjective, and so the complexity of nursing practice may result in variation between nurses in their identification of sources of stress, especially when the workplace and roles of nurses are changing, as is currently occurring in the United Kingdom health service. This could have implications for measures being introduced to address problems of stress in nursing.
To identify nurses' perceptions of workplace stress, consider the potential effectiveness of initiatives to reduce distress, and identify directions for future research. METHOD: A literature search from January 1985 to April 2003 was conducted using the key words nursing, stress, distress, stress management, job satisfaction, staff turnover and coping to identify research on sources of stress in adult and child care nursing. Recent (post-1997) United Kingdom Department of Health documents and literature about the views of practitioners was also consulted.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.74
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 73
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Nursing
- Distress
- Workload
- Psychological intervention
- Job satisfaction
- Psychology
- Coping (psychology)
- Health care