0000000000586727

AUTHOR

Juan P. Linzitto

showing 2 related works from this author

Palliative Care Professionals' Inner Lives: Cross-Cultural Application of the Awareness Model of Self-Care

2021

Compassionate professional qualities traditionally have not received the most attention in either critical or end of life care. Constant exposure to death, time pressure and workload, inadequate coping with personal emotions, grieving, and depression urge the development of an inner curricula of competences to promote professional quality of life and compassionate care. The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the universality of these problems and the need to equip ourselves with rigorously validated measurement and monitoring approaches that allow for unbiased comparisons. The main objective of this study was to offer evidence on the generalizability of the awareness model of self-care across thr…

Coping (psychology)Palliative careLeadership and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectApplied psychologycompassion fatiguelcsh:MedicineHealth Informaticscompassionate careArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineQuality of life (healthcare)OptimismHealth Information ManagementHealth careGeneralizability theory030212 general & internal medicinemedia_commonbusiness.industrycross-cultural comparisonHealth Policycompassion satisfactionlcsh:RCompassion fatigue030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPsychologybusinessEnd-of-life care
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A Brief Measure for the Assessment of Competence in Coping With Death: The Coping With Death Scale Short Version.

2019

Context. The coping with death competence is of great importance for palliative care professionals, who face daily exposure to death. It can keep them from suffering compassion fatigue and burnout, thus enhancing the quality of the care provided. Despite its relevance, there are only two measures of professionals’ ability to cope with death. Specifically, the Coping with Death Scale (CDS) has repeatedly shown psychometric problems with some of its items. Objective. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a short version of the CDS. Methods. Nine items from the original CDS were chosen for the short version. Two cross-sectional surveys were conducted in Spanish (N ¼ 385) and Argent…

AdultMaleCoping (psychology)Palliative careAttitude to DeathPsychometricsHealth PersonnelArgentinaBurnoutQuality of life scaleValidity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCoping with deathSurveys and QuestionnairesAdaptation PsychologicalMedicineHumansMeasurement invariance030212 general & internal medicineDaily exposureCompetence (human resources)General NursingAgedbusiness.industryPalliative care professionalsPalliative CareReproducibility of ResultsMiddle AgedReliabilityAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineCross-Sectional StudiesCompassion fatigueSpain030220 oncology & carcinogenesisQuality of LifeFemaleNeurology (clinical)Compassion FatiguebusinessFactor Analysis StatisticalInvariance measurementClinical psychologyJournal of pain and symptom management
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