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Feelings of being a second victim among Spanish midwives and obstetricians

Irene Santana‐Domínguez, Héctor González‐de la Torre, José Verdú Soriano, Miriam Berenguer‐Pérez, Juan José Suárez‐Sánchez, Alicia Martín Martínez

2022Nursing Open12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of feelings of being a second victim among midwives and obstetricians in Spain and to explore possible differences between the two professions. DESIGN: Cross-sectional descriptive-analytical observational study. METHODS: An online survey collecting several variables was administered throughout the Spanish territory. Spanish version of the Second Victim Experience and Support Tool (SVEST) was used. The data collection period was from May to December 2020. RESULTS: A total sample of 719 obstetricians and midwives were studied. There were significant differences between the two groups with respect to seven dimensions of SVEST: greater feelings of being a second victim among obstetricians in the dimensions physical distress/p ≤ .001, non-work-related support/p ≤ .001 and absenteeism/p ≤ .001 and greater feelings of being a second victim among midwives in the dimensions psychological distress/p ≤ .001, supervisor support/p = .011, professional self-efficacy/p ≤ .001 and intention to change jobs/p ≤ .001.

Topics & Concepts

FeelingObservational studyAbsenteeismDistressCross-sectional studyPsychologyMedicineNursingClinical psychologySocial psychologyPathologyNursing education and managementHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutStress and Burnout Research
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