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Emotions in nursing

Lewis, Gillian
Ashkanasy, Neal M.
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Abstract
Professional nurses work in an occupation that requires them to engage with others – patients, hospital staff, and medical practitioners. As such, they need to deal with their own and others’ emotions on a day-to-day basis, and often in stressful circumstances. It is argued in this chapter that, contrary to the traditional view that emotions are disruptive and inefficient, nurses need to recognize that emotions are an inherent component of their work, and to manage their own and others’ emotions effectively. The chapter analyzes nurses’ experience of emotions at five levels of analysis: (1) temporally varying emotions within-person; (2) individual differences in the experience of emotions; (3) emotion experiences in interpersonal relationships, including emotional labor; (4) emotions in teams and groups; and (5) emotions in the organization as a whole, including affective climate and culture. At the lower levels, emotional labor determines enculturation, social and role identity, and the delivery of health care. At the organization level, emotional labor remains a business resource. By adopting the multilevel perspective of emotions in nursing, the authors seek to elaborate on the range of emotional interaction from the within-person level up to and including the organization level.
Keywords
Date
2020
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
Handbook of research on stress and well-being in the public sector 
Volume
Issue
Page Range
106-121
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
File Access
Controlled
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