Compassion fatigue
Are people in the medical and humanitarian professions suffering from emotional burnout?
Compassion fatigue has long been an issue for people in the medical and humanitarian professions. People often enter those worlds because of a desire to care, and to be compassionate towards others, but often compassion is tested to the limits. What does compassion fatigue mean for both those suffering from emotional burnout, and those on the receiving end?
We hear from doctors, humanitarians, and experts who explain why compassion is a finite resource. While compassion can motivate us, using it up can lead to disaster and disconnect.
We explore whether a diet of death and destruction turns people away from news, and if shock advertising works for charities, or if it just adds to a feeling of helplessness and inaction. We ask if social media has further eroded our sense of compassion to strangers, and if compassion is even necessary online, where the rules seem so different to those offline.
We also hear from climate activists who argue that we need to move away from shock campaigning and 鈥渇lies in the eyes鈥 advertising, and reinforce the individual鈥檚 responsibility to affect change at a local level. But, is this realistic, and does pulling at the heartstrings actually lead to the most impactful outcomes?
(Photo: Iranian nurse on Covid-19 frontline strives to keep work-life balance. Credit: Reuters)
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- Sun 31 Jan 2021 04:06GMT麻豆社 World Service
- Sun 31 Jan 2021 14:06GMT麻豆社 World Service
- Wed 3 Feb 2021 10:06GMT麻豆社 World Service
- Thu 4 Feb 2021 00:06GMT麻豆社 World Service
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