College of Nursing, The University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
School of Nursing, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
J Clin Nurs. 2024 Jan;33(1):273-287. doi: 10.1111/jocn.16451. Epub 2022 Jul 22.
Research has shown sleep problems, elevated fatigue, and high cases of burnout, as well as signs of post-traumatic stress and psychological distress among nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many US hospitals attempted to minimise its impact on staff by providing basic resources, mental health services, and wellness programs. Therefore, it is critical to re-evaluate these well-being indices and guide future administrative efforts.
To determine the long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic after 18 months on hospital nurses' insomnia, fatigue, burnout, post-traumatic stress, and psychological distress.
Cross-sectional.
Data were collected online mainly through state board and nursing association listservs between July-September 2021 (N = 2488). The survey had psychometrically tested instruments (Insomnia Severity Index, Occupational Fatigue Exhaustion Recovery Scale, Maslach Burnout Inventory, Short Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and Patient Health Questionnaire-4) and sections on demographics, health, and work. The STrengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology checklist was followed for reporting.
Nurses had subthreshold insomnia, moderate-to-high chronic fatigue, high acute fatigue, and low-to-moderate intershift recovery. Regarding burnout, they experienced increased emotional exhaustion and personal accomplishment, and some depersonalisation. Nurses had mild psychological distress but scored high on post-traumatic stress. Nurses who frequently cared for patients with COVID-19 in the past months scored significantly worse in all measures than their co-workers. Factors such as nursing experience, shift length, and frequency of rest breaks were significantly related to all well-being indices.
Nurses' experiences were similar to findings from the early pandemic but with minor improvements in psychological distress. Nurses who frequently provided COVID-19 patient care, worked ≥12 h per shift, and skipped rest breaks scored worse on almost all well-being indices.
Administration can help nurses' recovery by providing psychological support, mental health services, and treatment options for insomnia, as well as re-structure current work schedules and ensure that rest breaks are taken.
研究表明,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,护士存在睡眠问题、疲劳加重、倦怠率高、创伤后应激和心理困扰等问题。许多美国医院通过提供基本资源、心理健康服务和健康计划来尽量减少其对员工的影响。因此,重新评估这些幸福感指数并指导未来的管理工作至关重要。
确定 COVID-19 大流行 18 个月后对医院护士失眠、疲劳、倦怠、创伤后应激和心理困扰的长期影响。
横断面研究。
数据主要通过州委员会和护理协会名录在线收集,于 2021 年 7 月至 9 月间进行(N=2488)。调查采用经过心理测试的工具(失眠严重程度指数、职业疲劳衰竭恢复量表、马斯拉赫倦怠量表、短创伤后应激障碍量表和患者健康问卷-4)和人口统计学、健康和工作部分。报告遵循加强观察性研究的报告标准。
护士存在亚临床失眠、中重度慢性疲劳、急性疲劳高、轮班间恢复低至中度。关于倦怠,他们经历了情绪耗竭和个人成就感增加,以及一些去人性化。护士有轻度心理困扰,但创伤后应激得分较高。过去几个月经常照顾 COVID-19 患者的护士在所有测量指标上的得分都明显低于同事。护理经验、轮班长度和休息频率等因素与所有幸福感指数显著相关。
护士的经历与大流行早期的发现相似,但心理困扰略有改善。经常照顾 COVID-19 患者、每班工作时间≥12 小时且跳过休息时间的护士在几乎所有幸福感指数上的得分都较差。
管理层可以通过提供心理支持、心理健康服务和失眠治疗选择,以及重新构建当前的工作时间表并确保休息时间得到保障,来帮助护士恢复。