Carpenter, Dawn2022-08-232022-08-232017-09-012019-09-25<p>Worcester Medicine. 2017 September/October;81(5):11. <a href="http://www.wdms.org/PDF/0917WOMED_final.pdf" target="_blank" title="Link to issue on publisher's website">Link to issue on publisher's website</a></p>https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/34430<p>Article is on page 11 of the issue PDF.</p>Dawn Carpenter, DNP, ACNP-BC, CCR, a critical care nurse and nurse practitioner, relates that nurses who experience high rates of moral distress, where conflicts arise around treatment goals that are contrary to the nurse's values, experience a high degree of burnout. A negative work environment can have a “contagion effect,”where burnout is the result of attitudes and negative conditions of the employment environment.en-USburnoutcritical carehealth professionalsCritical CareCritical Care NursingBurnout: A Pandemic Needing Emergent AttentionJournal Articlehttps://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsn_pp/10315420623gsn_pp/103