OCCUPATIONAL STRESS IN NURSES WORKING IN PALLIATIVE CARE

Authors

  • Letícia Nunes de Oliveira UNIG
  • Renata Pereira Silva UNIG
  • Sara de Oliveira Braga UNIG
  • Fernanda Cardoso Corrêa Póvoa UNIG
  • Wanderson Alves Ribeiro UNIG
  • Alexandre Gonçalves UNIG

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v4i01.28149

Keywords:

Occupational Stress. Palliative Care. Nurse. Occupational Health. Mental Health.

Abstract

Introduction: Occupational stress among nurses working in palliative care represents an important worker health issue resulting from continuous exposure to suffering, terminal illness and intense emotional demands. Objective: To analyze factors associated with occupational stress among nurses working in palliative care, considering its repercussions on professional practice and psychophysical health. Methodology: This is an integrative literature review conducted in the SciELO, LILACS, PubMed and Google Scholar databases. The descriptors “occupational stress”, “palliative care”, “worker health”, “nurse” and “work-related suffering” were combined using the Boolean operators AND and OR. Studies published between 2021 and 2026 in Portuguese, English and Spanish were included, resulting in a final sample of 10 articles. Results and Discussion: The findings revealed that frequent exposure to death, patient and family suffering, work overload, institutional weaknesses and insufficient professional training are the main factors associated with occupational stress. Consequences included anxiety, emotional exhaustion, moral distress, professional burnout and impairment in care quality. Coping strategies identified included self-care, institutional support, continuing education, psychological support, spirituality and strengthening interpersonal relationships. Conclusion: Occupational stress in palliative care arises from emotional, organizational and care-related factors, highlighting the need for institutional strategies focused on mental health promotion, professional qualification and improved working conditions for nurses.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Letícia Nunes de Oliveira, UNIG

Discente do Curso de Graduação em Enfermagem da Universidade Iguaçu

Renata Pereira Silva, UNIG

Discente do Curso de Graduação em Enfermagem da Universidade Iguaçu. 

Sara de Oliveira Braga, UNIG

Discente do Curso de Graduação em Enfermagem da Universidade Iguaçu. E-mail: enfsarabraga@gmail.com

Fernanda Cardoso Corrêa Póvoa, UNIG

Enfermeira. Mestre em Educação Em Saúde pela Universidade Federal Fluminense; Docente na Graduação em Enfermagem da Universidade Iguaçu (UNIG).

Wanderson Alves Ribeiro, UNIG

Enfermeiro. Mestre, Doutor com pós-doutorado pelo Programa Acadêmico em Ciências do Cuidado em Saúde pela Escola de Enfermagem Aurora de Afonso Costa da UFF; Docente nos Cursos da Universidade Iguaçu (UNIG) de Graduação em Enfermagem, Lato Sensu em Enfermagem em CTI e Emergência; Enfermagem em Neonatologia e Pediatria; Enfermagem em Obstetrícia; Fisioterapia em CTI com ênfase em Nenonatologia, Pediatria e Adulto. Stricto Sensu: Mestrado Acadêmico em Vigilância em Saúde. 

Alexandre Gonçalves, UNIG

Enfermeiro, Mestre em Enfermagem FE-UERJ. Doutor em Enfermagem  EEAN-UFRJ, Doutor em Artes Visuais EEAN-UFRJ, Enfermeiro do Hospital Municipal Miguel Couto Rj/RJ, Professor Adjunto da FAETEC, Professor da UNIG. 

Published

2026-07-10

How to Cite

Oliveira, L. N. de, Silva, R. P., Braga, S. de O., Póvoa, F. C. C., Ribeiro, W. A., & Gonçalves, A. (2026). OCCUPATIONAL STRESS IN NURSES WORKING IN PALLIATIVE CARE. Revista Ibero-Americana De Humanidades, Ciências E Educação, 4(01), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v4i01.28149