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Western Journal of Nursing Research
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Relationship as an Inherent Component in Healthy Women’s Fatigue

Laura Cox Dzurec

University of Connecticut School of Nursing

The notion of fatigue has remained ambiguous despite more than 100 years of study. Fatigue is recognized as subjective in nature, and it is studied and clinically managed as primarily intrapersonal in scope, with treatment approaches often based in an established, if unfounded, hierarchy of assumptions. When a physiologic cause for fatigue is not identifiable, fatigue complaints often are considered illegitimate. This article builds on data from the literature and from the author’s previous work in women’s fatigue and relatedness to suggest that interpersonal relationships may serve to exacerbate healthy women’s fatigue experiences. The importance of relationship to women’s life experience and the inherently relational character of women’s fatigue are discussed. The author proposes the importance of including interpersonal experiences as a component of the definition of fatigue for healthy women.

Western Journal of Nursing Research, Vol. 24, No. 4, 441-453 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/01945902024004010


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West J Nurs ResHome page
L. S. Aaronson, L. Pallikkathayil, and F. Crighton
A Qualitative Investigation of Fatigue among Healthy Working Adults
West J Nurs Res, June 1, 2003; 25(4): 419 - 433.
[Abstract] [PDF]