Emotional exhaustion

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    Emotion In The Workplace

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    The identity and performance for service based organisation or emotional labour normally will build by the impression management. (Goffman, 1959) The identity for them are based on the situational and negotiated with their customer. In addition, the social identity for them is like acting, but the individual attempts to present a consistent and believable performance to audience. The behaviour or the performance of emotional labour can be described as drama, and this drama metaphor has generated…

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    Emotional Impact PTSD has a significant emotional impact on returned soldiers; this is amplified with the occurrence of comorbid major depressive disorder (MDD). Ikin, Creamer, Sim, and McKenzie (2010) investigated the prevalence of comorbid PTSD and MDD amongst Australian veterans of the Korean War; 52 percent of PTSD cases were shown to have co-occurring depression. Key features of MDD include, disturbances in appetite, sleep, energy and concentration and overwhelming feelings of…

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    becoming famous artists or performers. These experiences allow us to change, develop, fulfill, and explore our potential. Therefore, loss is not always beneficial, some losses are more difficult to accept than others, and they can be devastating. The emotional response to debilitating loss refers to grief or bereavement which involves life’s changes, the way a person thinks, feels, and expresses themselves. It can be an unpleasant and challenging process of human existence lasting for months or…

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    After 18 other films and a ten-year wait, directors and brothers, Anthony and Joe Russo finally gave comic book fans the movie they’ve all been waiting for, Avengers: Infinity War (2018). Avengers: Infinity War brings all the fan favorite heroes together into one action-packed adventure. In the movie, Thanos (Josh Brolin) is scouring the entire universe to collect 6 infinity stones that different aspect of the universe: Space, Mind, Reality, Power, Time, and Soul. The Avengers unite together to…

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    Lazarus And Folkman Theory

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    Stress is defined as “appraised by the person (of a situation) as taxing or exceeding his or her resources and endangering well being, ” (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984) and is commonly regarded as something people experience when they attend hospital. Having a high stress level may impact negatively on communication between patient and staff within the hospital, with communication being defined as “The process of passing information and understanding from one person to another" (Theo Haimann SAY WHAT…

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    Nursing Leadership Practices in Healthcare Settings A leader’s ability to influence others manifests itself in the development of workplace culture and conditions. Nursing leadership has been illustrated as necessary for guidance in complex problems within nursing care (Smith, Manfredi, Hagos, Drummond-Huth, & Moore, 2006). Professional responsibilities of registered nurses include, “demonstrating leadership in client care by promoting healthy and culturally safe practice environments” (College…

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    Kirsten (2012) defines stress as a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or demanding circumstances. Kirsten, W. (2012). Stress: Symptoms, Causes, Approaches for Stress Reduction. Positive Health, (197), 1. McIntosh and Sheppy (2013) conclude that stress in nursing can be very incapacitating, leading to emotional disturbances and disorders, and it also has direct physiological consequences including illness and exhaustion. McIntosh, B., & Sheppy, B. (2013).…

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    Greek Dance History

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    Although it is impossible to identify an exact time period that dance evolved, it is estimated that it was approximately 9000 years ago; at around 6000BC, as shown from the Bhimbetka rock shelters throughout India. The paintings depicted tribe members celebrating after a successful hunt. That was later followed with other cave drawings throughout the Western World such as in countries as Spain and France. Modern Indian dance was actually based on a very early manuscript, 'The Natya Shastra',…

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    to combat stress where documented Napoleon’s field surgeons. Although the source did not state what name they gave it. Since then combat trauma has been documented as DaCosta’s syndrome, nostalgia, soldier’s irritable heart, Shell Shock, combat exhaustion, and operational fatigue. Finally by 1980 it was established in the DSM-3 as Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (Yaris, 2013). It took over 100 hundred years for it to be officially recognized and it only been about 30 years since then. One reason…

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    Such a conscience held within the mental thinking processes of the human brain needs a temporal release, which ends in the destruction of social links to others in fear of the destruction of ongoing events caused by the emotional release of undesirable memories.Memories which are only recalled for the purpose of this essay.The song I chose as my theme song is “The Boy Who Could Fly” by Pierce The Veil. As to why it is my selection you will soon come to realize In this song I can clearly see an…

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