The importance of self-care and contextual factors: A process evaluation of a recovery intervention for new nurses
Majken Epstein, Marie Söderström, Ann Rudman, Philip Tucker, Anna Dahlgren

TL;DR
This study explores how a recovery program helps new nurses manage stress and burnout by examining how the program works and what factors influence its success.
Contribution
The study identifies mechanisms of a recovery program and contextual factors affecting its implementation for new nurses.
Findings
The program increased knowledge about sleep and motivation for recovery strategies.
Contextual factors like workload and work schedules significantly influenced recovery opportunities.
Booster sessions and reminders were suggested to maintain recovery strategies post-program.
Abstract
Newly graduated nurses often face demanding working conditions including high workload, stress, and irregular working hours. During the first years of practice, burnout symptoms are common. Recovery, including sleep, can be seen as a key protective factor in the associations between stress, shift work and negative health outcomes. Previously, a proactive, group-based intervention (recovery programme) for new nurses, promoting individual strategies for recovery, decreased burnout and fatigue symptoms post-intervention and showed preventive effects on somatic symptoms over time. To optimise the implementation and outcomes of an intervention, it is important to understand its mechanisms of impact (i.e., how it produces change) as well as to identify contextual factors influencing its implementation. To deepen the understanding of the recovery programme’s mechanisms of impact and to…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Patient Involvement · Nursing education and management · Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units
