Beliefs, attachment style and secondary trauma as predictors of burnout in care staff for looked after children
Work-related stress (including burnout and occupational stress) are an increasing threat to people’s wellbeing at work. Despite their common occurrence among staff in healthcare settings, little effort has been put into researching unregistered care staff. This is a group of healthcare employees who...
Main Author: | Klama, Eve Katrin |
---|---|
Published: |
Staffordshire University
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.678233 |
Similar Items
-
Working with trauma : perceived competence and burnout in mental health staff
by: Went, Hannah
Published: (2016) -
Staff burnout : an exploration of individual and systemic factors
by: Towey-Swift, K.
Published: (2017) -
Do negative schema and beliefs about voice omnipotence and malevolence mediate the relationship between attachment style and distress from hearing voices?
by: Cole, Esther
Published: (2012) -
Trauma, attachment, emotion regulation and coping mechanisms in mental health
by: George, Catherine Louise
Published: (2018) -
Staff empathy and burnout in forensic mental health services : the impact of psychological formulation
by: Wilkinson, H.
Published: (2016)