Nurses and PTSD: Combine Professional Care With Self-Care

Is it really any surprise that one in four nurses will experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) sometime during their careers? You work with patients when they’re at their most vulnerable and fragile, struggling to survive. You also may face verbal and physical abuse from patients and families. Nursing is a high-stress profession that can include personal physical and emotional risk.
Taking care of yourself is critical to recovering from PTSD. Start by knowing the symptoms: agitation, irritability, hypervigilance, self-destructive behavior, social isolation, flashbacks, fear, severe anxiety, mistrust, loss of interest in pleasurable activities, guilt, loneliness, insomnia, nightmares, emotional detachment, and unwanted thoughts. Ask for help from your employer or primary care provider. The National Alliance on Mental Illness recommends combining psychotherapy and medication with complementary therapies such as yoga, meditation, and water therapy.
If you’re a nurse leader, you have an opportunity to support your employees. Seek out resources and advocate for organizational assistance for nurses with PTSD. Engage with your staff. When you listen, encourage, and support them, you develop trust, which can go a long way toward getting them the help they need.
Don’t let the work you do care for patients prevent you from taking care of yourself. Speak up if you think you may be suffering from PTSD.
Learn more about self-care and wellness in the Wellness 101 series at American Nurse Today.
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Content shared from American Nurse Today
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Editor’s note: This is an early release of an article that will appear in the March 2021 issue of American Nurse Journal. This article is shared on the Sumner College blog from American Nurse.
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