Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The health of our nurses is perhaps the most important consideration for delivering excellent patient care. The passionate approach of nurses can lead to a lot of fatigue and stress among nurses. Their health is perhaps the most important consideration for delivering excellent patient care. Self-care provides nurses with the framework for managing professional burnout, compassion fatigue, and traumatic stress. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of self-care skill educational intervention on increasing compassion satisfaction and reducing compassionate fatigue among clinical nurses. The interactive Self-care skill education will be administrated and evaluated.


Clinical Trial Description

Within the healthcare industry, healthcare professionals particularly nurses, are exposed to emotionally challenging and stressful situations, further, they experience increased levels of burnout and stress secondary to the nature of their work and work environment. The ability to manage work-related stress and burnout is vital to patient care and the individual health of nursing staff. After the extensive literature search, it was identified that a dearth of studies was conducted in Qatar that explored the prevalence of burnout among different healthcare professionals. Most the of studies evaluated risk predictor and prevalence rate whereas no intervention studies to reduce the rates was found in Qatar. Organizational support through workplace intervention and the mitigating plan for the mental well-being of nurses is of utmost importance and has proven to be of merit. The researcher is interested to bring down the trend of the prevalence rate of compassionate fatigue through cost-effective self-care skill educational intervention among clinical nurses and to increase their compassionate satisfaction which in turn impacts nurses' work satisfaction and quality of care for patients. The study aims to assess the effect of the self-care skill educational intervention on increasing compassion satisfaction among Nurses. This study uses a prospective, parallel group, randomized control group design to compare those who received Self -care Educational intervention to no intervention among clinical nurses. The samples will be divided into two groups and subjects will be randomly assigned to both groups. The research team will simple randomization method for randomly assigning the subjects to both arms. A total of 224 samples are needed for the study. The samples will be randomly assigned to the two arms. The Professional Quality of Life Tool will be used for compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction level among clinical nurses. This tool is considered valid and reliable. Assessment using ProQOL will be done at the beginning of administering the intervention and after 4 weeks of post-intervention. An evidence-based interactive self-care skill educational intervention is developed by the research team and validated. The intervention will be delivered as 1-day activity-based educational training. The self-care skill educational intervention consist following content: the concept of compassion fatigue, burnout awareness and recognition, eight dimensions of well-being, concept of self-care and followed by a demonstration of 7 guided self-care skill activities sleep hygiene, self-talk, gratitude Practices, Journaling, breathing exercise, heartfulness relaxation, and heartfulness meditation. At the end of the educational intervention, Participants will receive an instructional leaflet to practice the 7 self-care skills that they gained from the educational activity. The participants are encouraged to practice based on the developed self-care plan. The participants from the Control group will not receive any kind of intervention. after the 4 weeks assessed using ProQOL tool. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05983497
Study type Interventional
Source Hamad Medical Corporation
Contact Surekha Kiran Patil, Masters
Phone 55404109
Email spatil@hamad.qa
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date June 20, 2023
Completion date March 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT05884073 - Exercise for Oncology Care Professionals N/A
Completed NCT04911504 - The Effects of Resilience and Self-efficacy on Nurses' Compassion Fatigue
Completed NCT04929613 - Resilience Training for First Responders in the Opioid Epidemic N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06282913 - The Effect of Mindfulness Meditation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06288880 - Impact of Earthquake Trauma on Nurses' Compassion Fatigue: A Study From Kahramanmaraş, Turkey
Terminated NCT04368676 - Breath Regulation and Yogic Exercise An Online Therapy for Calm and Happiness During the COVID-19 Pandemic Early Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT05942469 - Fostering Optimal Regulation of Emotion for Prevention of Secondary Trauma (FOREST) N/A
Completed NCT05158504 - he Effect of Motivational Statements Applied to Nurses in the Emergency Department on Job Satisfaction, Compassion Fatigue and Communication Skills During the Pandemic Period: A Randomized Controlled Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05997082 - A Mindful Self-compassion Based Intervention for Specialist Rehabilitation Providers N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04846907 - Mental Health of Professionals Working in Pediatric Intensive Care Units During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Completed NCT04372303 - Effect of a Compassion Fatigue Resiliency Program N/A
Completed NCT03017469 - Achieving Resilience in Acute Care Nurses (ARISE). N/A
Completed NCT03914898 - Effect of Nurse-Led Intervention Programme Professional Quality of Life and Psychological Distress in Nurses N/A
Completed NCT04888000 - Interprofessional Group Intervention to Enhance Compassion Satisfaction and Resilience N/A
Completed NCT03070249 - Compassion Fatigue in ED Providers N/A