The first stage of burnout.
What is exhaustion?
The common universal reaction.
What is normal grief?
Metabolism slows, increased sweating, less talking, and sudden leg or arm movements.
A desired state of physical ease and freedom from pain and or unpleasant feelings; the ease or alleviation of a person’s feelings of distress.
What is comfort?
The immediate experience of being strengthened through having the needs of relief, ease, or transcendence met in the various contexts of experience.
What is Kolcaba's Holistic Comfort Theory?
The second stage of burnout.
What is indifferent?
Grieving before the loss occurs.
What is anticipatory grief?
Short surges of energy, breathing changes, and unresponsiveness.
What is days to hours before death?
Risk factors for alteration in comfort.
What is physical, psychospiritual, environmental, and sociocultural factors?
Is supportive, protective, and/or corrective internal or external environments.
What is Watsons Theory of Care?
The third stage of burnout.
What is feeling of failure?
When grieving is not socially sanctioned.
What is disenfranchised grief?
A dangerous, periodic breathing pattern characterized by alternating cycles of deep, rapid breathing, and apnea.
What is Cheyne-Stokes respirations?
Physiological and safety needs.
What is basic needs?
Meeting the specific need.
What is relief?
The fourth stage of burnout.
What is personalizing failure?
Loss that requires a different or complex grieving process in order to move forward.
What is complicated grief?
The last sense to go.
What is hearing?
Self-actualization: achieving ones full potential, including creative activities.
What is self-fulfillment needs?
A state of calm and contentment.
What is ease?
The fifth stage of burnout.
What is complete disengagement?
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Belongingness, love, and esteem.
What is psychological needs?
State in which one can rise above the problem/pain.
What is transcendence?