How 'Compassion Fatigue' Became a Clinical Term
In 1992, traumatologist Charles Figley noticed that wives of Vietnam veterans were beginning to dream their husbands' flashbacks — events they hadn't lived through were embedding themselves in listeners' nervous systems. In 1995, in Compassion Fatigue: Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized, he proposed the term and argued for extending DSM-IV PTSD Criterion A (trauma exposure) to 'learning of another's trauma.' DSM-5 (2013) eventually included 'repeated or extreme exposure in the course of work' under Criterion A4 — written for ER staff, child-abuse investigators, and trauma therapists.
Burnout, Compassion Fatigue, Vicarious Trauma — Not the Same
These three are often blended, but clinically they have different etiologies and treatments.
| Aspect | Burnout | Compassion Fatigue | Vicarious Trauma |
|---|---|---|---|
| Named by | Maslach 1976 | Figley 1995 | McCann & Pearlman 1990 |
| Onset | Gradual (months–years) | Can be acute, sudden | Cumulative, slow |
| Cause | Organization, workload, lack of control | Empathic contact with traumatized | Patients' stories reshape cognitive schema |
| Core symptoms | Emotional exhaustion, cynicism, low efficacy | Intrusive imagery, avoidance, hyperarousal (PTSD-like) | Shifted worldview, trust, safety |
| Recovery | Leave, redesign work | Trauma processing, supervision | Long-term psychotherapy |
A single nurse can have all three simultaneously — and many do. But 'I've worked too long and I'm exhausted' (burnout), 'I lost a child in the ER yesterday and can't sleep' (CF), and 'the world no longer feels safe' (VT) require different interventions.
ProQOL — Beth Stamm's Measure
Beth Hudnall Stamm's Professional Quality of Life Scale (ProQOL), revised 30+ times since 1995, uses 30 items across three subscales:
- Compassion Satisfaction: meaning and pleasure derived from helping.
- Burnout: helplessness, loss of efficacy, anger at the system.
- Secondary Traumatic Stress (STS): intrusive imagery, nightmares, avoidance related to patients' trauma.
The ProQOL is best used as 'a mirror for self-observation,' not a diagnostic. Stamm herself emphasizes it's 'a starting point for conversation, not a diagnosis.' Self-checking every six months and discussing results with a peer for an hour has been shown to lower STS scores (Berger 2015).
Korea — What the Numbers Mean
The Korean Nurses Association's 2022 Hospital Nurse Turnover Survey (released 2023) reported a 19.2% overall nurse turnover and 52.8% turnover among new nurses (under one year). The top causes were workload, shift work, and workplace harassment — but open-ended responses recur with: 'no matter what I do, patients die' and 'I see patients' faces after my shift.' That is STS.
During COVID-19, Korean studies (e.g., Kim et al., 2021, Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association) reported significantly higher PTSD-suspect rates among COVID-ward nurses than general-ward staff. 'The last words of a dying patient whose family couldn't enter the isolation room' — such an experience etches the nervous system in a single occurrence.
Compassion fatigue is not limited to medicine:
- Social workers / child protection: daily abuse cases lead to 'the world has become frightening.'
- Childcare teachers: Hochschild's emotional labor — chronic 'surface acting' (smiling while not feeling it) creates emotional dissonance and STS risk.
- School counselors: bearing sole responsibility for suicide-risk students leads to intrusive thoughts.
- Family caregivers: 50-something children caring for parents with dementia often score higher on depression and anxiety than the patient.
Neurobiology — Why 'Just Listening' Imprints
The mirror neuron system and anterior insula that underlie empathy activate when we see or hear another's pain (Singer 2004). Imagined and experienced pain share circuitry. Add professional responsibility ('I must save them'), and the amygdala codes the event as one's own. During sleep, hippocampus-amygdala replay produces intrusive dreams.
This is not 'weakness.' Studies consistently show higher-empathy clinicians have higher STS risk (Hofmeyer 2020). It's a normally functioning nervous system.
What Restores — Evidence-Based
1) Self-Compassion (Neff)
Kristin Neff and Christopher Germer's MSC (Mindful Self-Compassion) 8-week program trains 'treat yourself like a good friend would.' Hofmeyer (2020) and many others find self-compassion negatively correlated with STS and positively with compassion satisfaction in nurses and therapists. The protective factor is not 'more empathy' but 'empathy toward yourself.'
2) Peer Supervision / Debriefing
Structured peer conversation soon after an event reduces intrusive symptoms. Mandatory single-session psychological debriefing (CISD) is debated, but ongoing peer-led supervision has more stable effects.
3) STAR — Strategies for Trauma Awareness and Resilience
Developed at Eastern Mennonite University, STAR is a 5-day trauma-recovery program for clinicians, humanitarian workers, and educators, combining neurobiology education, somatic techniques, and ritual. It's used in global health and disaster response.
4) Organizational Change
Individual mindfulness alone won't fix it. Staffing, shift rationalization, mandatory post-event rest, and team rituals for patient deaths — recovery requires the organization to admit compassion fatigue is a system issue. Sending people to a 'resilience workshop' then back to 30-hour night shifts is an insult.
Warning Signs — Self-Check
If three or more of these persist over two weeks, consult a peer or professional:
- Patient cases intrude into thought or dreams.
- Unconscious avoidance of certain patient types, or emotional numbing.
- Physical symptoms before work (headache, nausea, stomachache).
- Distance from family and friends ('their concerns feel trivial').
- Increased self-medication (alcohol, sleep aids, overeating).
- Daily thought: 'I can't do this anymore.'
Conclusion: Care Has Limits
Figley wrote: 'The capacity for empathy is the therapist's greatest asset and greatest vulnerability.' Korea's 19% turnover is not personal weakness; it's a system that ignored human neurobiology.
Nurses, social workers, teachers, counselors, family caregivers — the stories you hear etch themselves into your body. Acknowledging that is the first treatment. Print the ProQOL, self-check every six months, and after a hard shift say 'today was rough' to a peer — small, but the most powerful prescription neuroscience offers.