Tag Archives: food

Prioritizing Self-Care: Tips for Healthcare Workers to Avoid Burnout

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Photo from Freepik

With the fast-paced and demanding work of healthcare, self-care needs to be a priority. The risk of burnout looms large in the world of healthcare. Burnout can affect both personal well-being and work effectiveness. Healthcare professionals face unique challenges, from grueling schedules to emotionally taxing situations. Self-care is not just beneficial but is essential. Below are some tips to safeguard mental health and to sustain passion for your work.

Consume Foods High in Nutrients

There is a strong connection between a balanced diet and mental health. By incorporating nutrient-rich foods, such as those high in omega-3 fatty acids, into your meals, you can boost brain function and energy levels. This supports your mental well-being and provides the stamina you need to handle the demands of your work. Having a nutritional plan, guided by a comprehensive health assessment can help you receive the necessary vitamins and minerals, for sustainable work-life balance.

Prioritize Good Sleep

Quality sleep is essential for both mental and physical health. Adequate rest enhances brain function and strengthens your immune system. For those working in high-pressure jobs, sleep deprivation can increase the risk of anxiety and depression. Having a consistent sleep routine can decrease these risks, promoting a healthier mood and better overall well-being. Making sleep a priority can help you be more resilient against stress and enhance patient care.

Find a Less Stressful Career Path

Finding a less stressful job within healthcare can be an important step in preserving your mental health. First, create a stellar and professional-looking resume that showcases your skills and achievements. Use an online resume builder to put your best foot forward and simplify the process. These tools offer a variety of professionally designed templates that you can customize with your own content, photos, colors, and images, ensuring your resume stands out in a competitive job market.

Request a Flexible Schedule

Having flexible scheduling can significantly reduce stress and prevent burnout among healthcare workers. By allowing you to tailor your shifts to align with personal responsibilities (such as childcare or education), you can achieve a better work-life balance. Employees with more control over their schedules tend to be more productive and engaged. Modern scheduling tools are often powered by AI. They, offer efficient solutions that adapt to the dynamic needs of healthcare workers, to benefit both individuals and the workplace.

Look for Humor in Your Work

Humor can help you cope with the challenges of healthcare. Incorporate humor into daily interactions to help decrease stress and reduce the risk of emotional exhaustion. Laughter with colleagues and patients can act as a buffer against the emotional toll of dealing with pain and loss. However, it’s important to use humor sensitively. It may not resonate with everyone. But humor can enhance communication and teamwork in a supportive work environment.

Seek Peer Support

Hold peer support meetings regularly. They are crucial for healthcare professionals to share experiences and challenges in a safe environment. These gatherings provide a confidential space where you can express feelings and receive empathy from others. By fostering a sense of community, these meetings help decrease loneliness and anxiety. When people realize others have faced similar struggles, they feel more at ease. And they are more likely to continue sharing if it is a caring workplace culture.

Try Gratitude Journaling

Gratitude journaling can be a powerful tool for healthcare workers to reduce burnout and create a more positive outlook. By taking a few minutes each day to reflect on and write down moments of gratitude, you can shift your focus from stressors to the rewarding aspects of your work and life. Focusing on gratitude helps build emotional resilience, enhance mental well-being, and provide a sense of purpose. Regular gratitude journaling also encourages mindfulness and can act as a reminder of the great impact healthcare workers have on their patients’ lives.

Use these tips to transform your healthcare experience and to foster a healthier and more sustainable career. When you prioritize self-care and community support, you can maintain your passion and dedication, which can enhance the quality of care you provide.

Explore a wealth of health education resources at Health Vista and empower yourself and your community with knowledge for a healthier future.

Blog # 32 added 12-15-24.  Written by Guest Contributor Gwen Payne of invisiblemoms.com.

Reflections on Emotional Eating

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Wanting to eat when not physically hungry:

I have a problem with emotional eating. I have the urge to taste almost any food that is around, and to eat too much of the “comfort foods” that I love. Sometimes when I am upset, I have been known to have a “binge” by eating way too much of something. In the past, I have eaten several servings at a time of cereal, chips, pizza, candy, or cookies. I used to take a bag of chocolate chips, out of the freezer to eat.

But I can control it better now that I recognize what is happening and I cope with the problems that are making me feel like bingeing.  I also avoid keeping “trigger foods” in the house.  Those strategies  helped me to lose weight and to stay at a healthier weight for several years.

This Emotional Eating Handout describes what I learned about how your mood can affect what you eat.

Food and feelings go together:

  • We tend to link food with enjoyment, affection, and nurturing
  • Food is usually part of emotion-filled events, either happy or unhappy ones
  • Eating for comfort is a common behavior that comes from a deep connection within us
  • Some people eat in response to emotions rather than hunger
  • If you are overweight, ask yourself if emotional eating is an issue for you

Mindfulness skills can develop ways to cope:

  • Cope better with the daily ups and downs of daily life
  • Recognize and avoid black-and-white thinking (where things and actions are looked at as being good or bad, right or wrong)
  • Avoid thinking that things should be perfect
  • Use coping skills for self-control when dealing with food temptations and relapses
  • Get the help you need for problem-solving

Mood and weight changes:

    • Food choices affect mood in positive or negative ways
    • Learn how to eat healthier to improve your mood
    • Hormones affect mood – Examples are cortisol (from adrenal glands) or estrogen (a female sex hormone)

For a more wide-ranging discussion of nutrition, also see https://healthvista.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/ExploringNutritionIcebreakersDiscussionGuide.pdf

“Triggers” for emotional eating:

  • Recognize and avoid any “triggers” you have
  • A trigger food can set off a “binge” of eating, no matter what your mood is – Examples include ice cream, cookies, nuts, potato chips
  • Trigger foods are not the same as favorite foods, comfort foods, or food cravings
  • A trigger feeling is an emotion, good or bad, that leads to overeating – Any available food will do
  • A trigger environment is a specific place or setting that leads to overeating – Examples include movie theaters, buffet restaurants, sporting events or social gatherings
  • Eating triggers do happen – They are a sign to stop and think about how you can avoid them from happening in the future

Understand the connection between emotions and eating, to help you succeed in maintaining a healthy weight

Weight Watchers Research Department. (2009). Emotional eating, Mind skills for lasting weight loss, Mood and weight, and Eating triggers retrieved from www.weightwatchers.com

Mindfulness instead of emotional eating:

People tend to eat mindlessly most of the time. When “chowing down,” we are usually thinking about other things and not really tasting our food.

We often respond to the sight of food with the impulse to devour it – whether or not we are actually hungry.

We miss the subtle feelings of fullness if we don’t slow down to finish chewing and swallowing before we pick up the next bite

It takes 20 minutes for your body to signal its fullness. By eating fast, you are likely to overeat.

Try eating mindfully by savoring the sight, smell, texture, the color and light on the food, the connection to the outside world, the taste and feel of the food as you eat it slowly.

In mindfulness retreats, the meals are usually served in silence. That way, you can think about the food and the efforts that went into growing and preparing it.

You may feel satisfied without eating as much food as you have been eating. You can practice mindful eating when you eat alone or in silence.

Siegel, R. (2010). The mindfulness solution: Everyday practices for everyday problems, p. 261-264. New York: Guilford Press

Being mindful and aware of emotional eating can really help you make healthier habits. Call a friend when you feel like bingeing. If there is something upsetting you, figure out what to do and write it down (or do it). Take a walk or do some exercises. Take a bath or shower. Get busy doing something that takes your mind off your cravings.

You can get past it if you resist for a few minutes.  If you are physically satisfied and no longer hungry, push away from the table and put the food away.  The urges will weaken and go away.  You are more in control than you think!

Blog #6  By Mary Knutson RN, MSN for Health Vista, Inc.

Updated 5-25-20