Hospice Care: Hope and Meaning in Life Mediate Subjective Well-Being of Staff

Author:

Shiri Shimon12ORCID,Wexler Isaiah32,Marmor Anat12,Meiner Zeev1,Schwartz Isabella1,Levzion Korach Osnat4,Azoulay Daniel5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical and Medical Rehabilitation, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

2. Shimon Shiri, Isaiah Wexler, and Anat Marmor contributed equally to this work.

3. Department of Pediatrics, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

4. Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

5. Hospice Unit, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

Abstract

Objectives: Subjective well-being has been associated with decreased work burnout and elevated work engagement. We investigated the impact of hope and meaning in life on subjective well-being among workers in a hospice care setting. Comparison was made to health-care workers in a rehabilitation unit. Methods: Thirty-five hospice care workers were surveyed and their responses compared with those of 36 rehabilitation workers. Survey instruments measuring hope, meaning in life, work engagement, and satisfaction with life were utilized. Results: Individuals working in a hospice care center have significantly higher levels of work engagement than their counterparts in rehabilitation. For both groups, hope was significantly related to subjective well-being. For hospice care but not rehabilitation workers, meaning in life was also related to subjective well-being. Multivariate analysis showed that hope and meaning in life were independent factors predicting subjective well-being in hospice care workers. Significance of Results: Hospice care workers are highly engaged in their work despite the challenging nature of their work. What characterizes these workers is a level of subjective well-being that is related to both meaning in life and hope. Maintaining a high level of subjective well-being may be an important factor in preventing burnout among those working in hospice care settings.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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