Telephone nurses' perceived stress, self‐efficacy and empathy in their work with frequent callers

Abstract Aim To examine telephone nurses' perceived stress, self‐efficacy and empathy in their work with answering calls from frequent callers. Design The study is a quantitative questionnaire survey study with a comparative design. Methods Telephone nurses (N = 199) answered a survey containin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sofia Skogevall, Inger K. Holmström, Elenor Kaminsky, Jakob Håkansson Eklund
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-03-01
Series:Nursing Open
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.889
Description
Summary:Abstract Aim To examine telephone nurses' perceived stress, self‐efficacy and empathy in their work with answering calls from frequent callers. Design The study is a quantitative questionnaire survey study with a comparative design. Methods Telephone nurses (N = 199) answered a survey containing three instruments: Perceived Stress Scale, General Self‐Efficacy Scale and Jefferson's Scale of Empathy. Correlation analysis, multiple regression analysis and analysis of variance were performed to test the research questions. Results Significant negative correlations were found between stress involving calls from FCs and self‐efficacy (r = −.238), and significant negative correlations between stress involving calls from frequent callers and empathy (r = −.185). It was further revealed that telephone nurses who had worked less than 30 years scored higher on Jefferson's Scale of empathy than those who had worked more than 30 years, F(1, 183) = 4.98, η2 = 0.027.
ISSN:2054-1058