Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5953869 | Chest | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Blame has been thought to affect quality by decreasing error reporting. Very little is known about the incidence, characteristics, or consequences of the distress caused by being blamed. Blame-related distress (B-RD) may be related to moral distress, but may also be a factor in burnout, compassion fatigue, lateral violence, and second-victim syndrome. The purpose of this article is to explore these related concepts through a literature review applied to three index critical care clinician cases.
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Authors
Judy E. DNP, RN, Donna L. EdD, Shannon RN, MSN, OCN, Yoanna MD, FCCP,