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Journal Article

Citation

Boscarino JA, Figley CR, Adams RE. Int. J. Emerg. Ment. Health 2004; 6(2): 57-66.

Affiliation

Division of Health and Science Policy, The New York Academy of Medicine, New York, NY, USA. jboscarino@nyam.org

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Chevron Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15298076

PMCID

PMC2713725

Abstract

Experience suggests that individuals working in the caring and psychotherapeutic professions are among those to provide mental health services to disaster victims suffering from psychological trauma following catastrophic events. Yet, few studies have focused on the emotional exhaustion from working with such clients, referred to as compassion fatigue (CF) in this study, and how CF differs from other occupational hazards, such as secondary trauma (ST) and job burnout. In the present study, we used recently validated scales to predict ST and job burnout related to providing services to those affected by the World Trade Center (WTC) attacks. Our study data were based on a random survey of 236 social workers living in New York City (NYC), over 80% of which reported being involved in post-WTC disaster counseling efforts. Our analyses indicated that controlling for demographic factors, years of counseling, and personal trauma history, ST was positively associated with WTC recovery involvement (p <. 001) and negatively associated with having a supportive work environment (p < . 01). In contrast, job burnout was negatively associated with having a supportive work environment (p < .01), but not associated with WTC involvement or WTC counseling efforts. We discuss these results in light of future conceptual and empirical research needs.


Language: en

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