Schierberl Scherr Anna E, Ayotte Brian J, Kellogg Marni B
Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, Massachusetts, United States.
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, United States.
SAGE Open Nurs. 2021 Jun 14;7:23779608211024213. doi: 10.1177/23779608211024213. eCollection 2021 Jan-Dec.
Staff and equipment shortages and an easily transmissible virus make working in the COVID-19 pandemic demanding physically and psychologically. Nurses on the frontlines are particularly vulnerable to the adversity of working under these conditions, particularly with regard to mental health. Thus, understanding risk and protective factors for this vulnerable and essential group is critical for identifying potential targets of interventions. We had two aims for the current study: (a) to examine work functioning and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress (PTSD) among nurses who did and did not care for patients with COVID-19; and (b) to determine if resilience and social support moderate these relationships.
For three weeks in July 2020, nurses across the United States were invited to participate in an online survey collecting data on demographics, resilience, social support, and screening measures of depression, PTSD, anxiety, and distracted practice. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and hierarchical regression for each outcome measure.
Our findings support a growing body of research reporting that nurses are experiencing mental health sequelae during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially those providing direct care to patients with the virus. We found that compared to nurses who did not care for patients with COVID-19, those who did reported increased symptoms of PTSD, depression, and anxiety. A novel contribution is our finding that nurses providing direct COVID-19 care also experienced increased levels of distracted practice, a behavioral measure of distraction linking to a potential impact on patient care. We also found that resilience and social support acted as moderators of some of these relationships. Fostering resilience and social support may help buffer the effects of providing care to patients with COVID-19 and could potentially decrease nurse vulnerability to developing psychological symptoms and impairment on the job.
人员和设备短缺以及一种易于传播的病毒使得在新冠疫情期间工作对身体和心理都有很高要求。一线护士在这些条件下工作尤其容易受到不利影响,特别是在心理健康方面。因此,了解这一脆弱且至关重要群体的风险和保护因素对于确定潜在的干预目标至关重要。我们进行本研究有两个目的:(a)检查护理和未护理新冠患者的护士的工作功能以及抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状;(b)确定复原力和社会支持是否调节这些关系。
2020年7月的三周时间里,邀请了美国各地的护士参与一项在线调查,收集有关人口统计学、复原力、社会支持以及抑郁、PTSD、焦虑和注意力分散行为筛查措施的数据。对每个结果指标使用描述性统计和分层回归进行数据分析。
我们的研究结果支持了越来越多的研究报告,即在新冠疫情期间护士正经历心理健康后遗症,尤其是那些为感染病毒的患者提供直接护理的护士。我们发现,与未护理新冠患者的护士相比,护理新冠患者的护士报告的PTSD、抑郁和焦虑症状有所增加。一个新的发现是,我们发现提供直接新冠护理的护士注意力分散行为水平也有所增加,注意力分散行为是一种与对患者护理的潜在影响相关的注意力分散行为指标。我们还发现复原力和社会支持在其中一些关系中起到了调节作用。培养复原力和社会支持可能有助于缓冲为新冠患者提供护理的影响,并有可能降低护士出现心理症状和工作受损的易感性。