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  1. Cross-Validation of the Spanish HP-Version of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy Confirmed with Some Cross-Cultural Differences.Adelina Alcorta-Garza, Montserrat San-Martín, Roberto Delgado-Bolton, Jorge Soler-González, Helena Roig & Luis Vivanco - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Empathy Is a Protective Factor of Burnout in Physicians: New Neuro-Phenomenological Hypotheses Regarding Empathy and Sympathy in Care Relationship.Bérangère Thirioux, François Birault & Nematollah Jaafari - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7:205258.
    Burnout is a multidimensional work-related syndrome that is characterized by emotional exhaustion, depersonalization – or cynicism – and diminution of personal accomplishment. Burnout particularly affects physicians. In medicine as well as other professions, burnout occurrence depends on personal, developmental-psychodynamic, professional and environmental factors. Recently, it has been proposed to specifically define burnout in physicians as “pathology of care relationship”. That is, burnout would arise, among the above-mentioned factors, from the specificity of the care relationship as it develops between the physician (...)
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  • The exodus of health professionals from sub‐Saharan Africa: balancing human rights and societal needs in the twenty‐first century.Linda Ogilvie, Judy E. Mill, Barbara Astle, Anne Fanning & Mary Opare - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (2):114-124.
    Increased international migration of health professionals is weakening healthcare systems in low‐income countries, particularly those in sub‐Saharan Africa. The migration of nurses, physicians and other health professionals from countries in sub‐Saharan Africa poses a major threat to the achievement of health equity in this region. As nurses form the backbone of healthcare systems in many of the affected countries, it is the accelerating migration of nurses that will be most critical over the next few years. In this paper we present (...)
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