{{ (moduleVm.actions && moduleVm.changeStatus) ? moduleVm.status : '' }} Addressing Compassion Fatigue In Trauma Emergency and Intensive Care Settings: A Pilot Study

Activity Steps

Learning Objectives

After completing this continuing education activity you will be able to:

  1. Explain the results of debriefings on compassion fatigue in a Midwestern U.S. Level II trauma center.
  2. Identify the effects of debriefings by department, professional roles, and professional experience.
  3. Suggest ways in which greater benefit may be derived from debriefings after a death.

Learning Outcomes

Seventy-five percent of participants will demonstrate knowledge of the results of a study on the use of structured debriefing sessions and their impact on compassion fatigue experienced by emergency and intensive care healthcare professionals after patient death by achieving a minimum score of 70% on the outcomes-based posttest.
Price: $24.95

Credits:

  • ANCC 2.5 CH
  • DC - BON 2.5 CH
  • FL - BON 2.5 CH
  • GA - BON 2.5 CH
  • NM - BON 2.5 CH
  • SC - BON 2.5 CH
  • WV - BOERN 2.5 CH

Lippincott Professional Development is accredited with distinction as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. This activity is also provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number CEP 11749. Lippincott Professional Development is also an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the District of Columbia Board of Nursing, Florida Board of Nursing, Georgia Board of Nursing, New Mexico Board of Nursing, South Carolina Board of Nursing, and West Virginia Board of Examiners for Registered Professional Nurses, #50-1223.













Test Code: JTN0722B
Published: Jul/Aug 2022
Expires: 6/6/2025
Required Passing Score: 8/10 (80%)
Authors: Katherine E. Beres, MSN, RN; Lisa M. Zajac, DNP, RN, ANP-BC, OCN; Heidi Mason, DNP, RN, ACNP-BC; Karen Krenke, BSN, RN; Deena Kelly Costa, PhD, RN
Specialties: Critical Care, Emergency, Trauma