Emotional exhaustion

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    Palliative Care

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    the right to make choices, use their cultural, customs and personal values, confidentiality, and be treated with dignity. • Holistic: To address diverse needs of patients and the family, interdisciplinary teams should be involved to attend to the emotional, spiritual and social aspects of…

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    Cancer is described as uncontrolled growth of the abnormal body cells. Cancer associated with altered expression of cellular genes which its normal function is to regulate proliferation and differentiation of cell. Cancer is the second major cause of death for both men and women in the United States (Copstead & Banasik, 2013). According to National Cancer Institute (2014), there are over one hundred types of cancer existing. Types of cancers are named for the organ or type of cell in which its…

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    Seyle's Stress Theory

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    Stress Part A In this project I’ll be explaining the theories of stress based on different people, but mainly focussing on the theory of Selye. Seyle’s theory is known as the General Adaption Syndrome. Before I can do that, I need to thoroughly explain stress and can attribute to stress:- Stress is the feeling we experience when we feel too overwhelmed and are unable to deal with the magnitude of work, pressure placed on us, this stress is caused by a stressor. A stressor is the stimulant of…

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    to take care of themselves. Lobell (2001, para. 7) stated that “You cannot keep giving to others if you do not give to yourself, first”. Self-care is beneficial to nurses to cope with stressors during their practice as it helps to reduce fatigue, exhaustion, and tension (Blum,…

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    Mary Turner Thesis

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    The symptoms include the following, which are all expressed by Mary Turner; delusions, hallucinations, impaired communication, negative emotional responses and inability to function normally(mayoclinic.org). Throughout the book, she constantly expresses negative emotional responses that are parallel to the traits of schizophrenia. She suffers from intense anxiety and depression due to her isolation from her husband and her neighbours at the foreign land…

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    The five key success personality factors are agreeableness, conscientiousness, extroversion, emotional stability, and openness. Agreeableness is an important factor to form reciprocal social associations. Expatriates who are agreeable, who deal with conflict collaboratively, help for mutual understanding and are less competitive, report greater cross-cultural…

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    Neighborhood Definition

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    from home and child, as well as stress and exhaustion. Without the proper support group or resources, a single parent and child can be greatly affected. Also, the developmental niche is considered through cultural context, parents with limited means can reduce or remove niches: certain physical and social setting, customs of childcare and child rearing, and caretaker psychology (Hutchinson, 2013). These structures help children and adolescent emotional and physical needs as they…

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    Stress And Coping Strategies

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    STRESS AND COPING STRATEGIES Module I: Stress Stress can be defined as actions and circumstances to which you cannot respond adequately or to which you respond at the cost of excessive wear and tear on the body. Stress is an emotional and physical reaction to change. Stress is defined as “The adverse reaction people have to excessive pressure or other types of demand placed on them” Stress can act as a creative force that increases drive and energy, but once it reaches a certain degree, the…

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    are to blame for this. A reported thirty percent of athletes blame a coach or parent for their decision to quit sports all together. This is usually due to what is called a burn out. Burnout is defined by sport psychologists as “physical/emotional exhaustion, sport devaluation, and reduced athletic accomplishment.” Burn out can occur because of many different reasons such as, excessive stress and pressure to win, feelings of entrapment, costs of the sport begin to outweigh the benefits,…

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    try to rush his speech. So he isn't pushed on the spot to explain himself over and over again to them. He tells the audience of his defeat in the situation and how it caused him to experience overwhelming emotions through his “grief, fear, doubt, exhaustion, panic, confusion, and shock.” The author exaggerates his emotion through listing many of them right after another. Making the audience believe that he experienced these emotions throughout handling and coping this situation. He also tries to…

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