Enhancing Trauma Resilience in Nurses and Personal Support Workers: A Feasibility Study of an 8-Week Supportive Trauma Exposure Preparation Intervention.

Publication date: Jun 30, 2025

BackgroundNurses and personal support workers (PSWs) frequently face trauma in their work without sufficient resources to manage the resulting emotional stress. This contributes to high rates of burnout, which have remained elevated since the COVID-19 pandemic. PurposeTo address the need for effective interventions that mitigate the impact of trauma exposure in the healthcare workplace, we developed the Supportive Trauma Exposure Preparation (STEP) program, an 8-week virtual psychotherapy intervention. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the STEP program in reducing burnout and enhancing resilience. MethodsA pilot study was conducted with 35 nurses and PSWs in Ontario assessing the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the STEP program at three months follow-up. Participants attended 8 weekly psychotherapy sessions, provided feedback on their experiences, and completed measures of burnout, resilience, mood, anxiety, and work and life functioning. ResultsThe study demonstrated strong feasibility and acceptability, with high participant engagement and satisfaction with the STEP program. Improvements in burnout and work functioning were observed at the three-month follow-up. ConclusionsThe STEP program shows promise as a novel intervention addressing the critical unmet need for preventing and managing the detrimental effects of trauma exposure among nurses and PSWs in the healthcare workplace. ClinicalTrials. gov Registration # NCT04682561 (URL: https://clinicaltrials. gov/study/NCT04682561).

Concepts Keywords
Clinicaltrials burnout
High Nurses
Nct04682561 psychotherapy
Ontario resilience
Weekly trauma
workplace stress

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO intervention
disease MESH emotional stress
disease MESH burnout
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH anxiety
disease MESH workplace stress

Original Article

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