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RESEARCH PRODUCT

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

Laura GalianaJosé M. TomásNoemí SansóGustavo De SimoneGladys GranceFernanda ArenaAmparo OliverJuan P. Linzitto

subject

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

description

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 three care systems under particular idiosyncrasy. Regarding the sample, 817 palliative care professionals from Spain, Argentina, and Brazil participated in this cross-sectional study using a multigroup structural equation modeling strategy. The measures showed good reliability in the three countries. When testing the multigroup model against the configural and constrained models, the assumptions were fulfilled, and only two relationships of the model revealed differences among contexts. The hypotheses posited by the awareness model of self-care were supported and a similar predictive power on the professional quality of life dimensions was found. Self-care, awareness, and coping with death were competences that remained outstanding no matter the country, resulting in optimism about the possibility of acting with more integrative approaches and campaigns by international policy-makers with the consensus of world healthcare organizations.

10.3390/healthcare9010081https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13003/10886