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这是我的克里米亚战争:养老院领导人的 COVID-19 经历。

This Was My Crimean War: COVID-19 Experiences of Nursing Home Leaders.

机构信息

Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.

出版信息

J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2022 Nov;23(11):1827-1832. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2022.08.001. Epub 2022 Aug 12.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To describe professional and personal experiences of nursing home care leaders during early waves of the COVID-19 pandemic.

DESIGN

Qualitative interpretive description.

SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS

Eight sites across 2 Canadian provinces. Sites varied by COVID-19 status (low or high), size (<120 or ≥120 beds), and ownership model (for-profit or not-for-profit). We recruited 21 leaders as participants: 14 managers and 7 directors of care.

METHODS

Remote Zoom-assisted semi-structured interviews conducted from January to April 2021. Concurrent data generation and inductive content analysis occurred throughout. Sampling ceased once we reached sufficient analytic variation and richness to answer research questions.

RESULTS

Most participants were female, ≥50 years of age, and born in Canada. We found 4 major themes. (1) Responsibility to protect: Extreme precautions were employed to protect residents, staff, and leaders' families. Leaders experienced profound distress when COVID-19 infiltrated their care homes. (2) Overwhelming workloads: Changing public health orders and redeployment to pandemic-related activities caused administrative chaos. Leaders worked double shifts to cope with pandemic demands and maintain their usual work. (3) Mental and emotional toll: All participants reported symptoms of anxiety, depression, and insomnia, leading to ongoing exhaustion. Shifting staff focus from caring to custodial enforcement of isolation caused considerable distress, guilt, and grief. (4) Moving forward: The pandemic spotlighted deficiencies in the nursing home context that lead to inadequate quality of resident care and staff burnout. Some leaders indicated their pandemic experience signaled an unanticipated end to their careers.

CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS

Nursing home leaders faced mental distress and inordinate workloads during the pandemic. This is an urgent call for systemic change to improve working conditions for leaders and quality of care and quality of life for residents. Nursing home leaders are at increased risk of burnout, which must be addressed to mitigate attrition in the sector.

摘要

目的

描述新冠疫情早期阶段养老院护理负责人的专业和个人经历。

设计

定性解释性描述。

地点和参与者

加拿大 2 个省的 8 个地点。各地点的新冠疫情状况(低或高)、规模(<120 或 ≥120 张床位)和所有权模式(营利性或非营利性)不同。我们招募了 21 名领导者作为参与者:14 名经理和 7 名护理主任。

方法

2021 年 1 月至 4 月期间进行远程 Zoom 辅助半结构化访谈。整个过程中同时进行数据生成和归纳内容分析。一旦达到足够的分析变化和丰富度来回答研究问题,就停止抽样。

结果

大多数参与者为女性,年龄≥50 岁,且在加拿大出生。我们发现了 4 个主要主题。(1)保护责任:采取极端预防措施保护居民、工作人员和领导家属。当新冠疫情渗透到他们的养老院时,领导者经历了深深的痛苦。(2)压倒性的工作量:不断变化的公共卫生命令和重新部署到与大流行相关的活动导致行政混乱。领导者需要加班来应对大流行的需求并维持他们的正常工作。(3)精神和情感压力:所有参与者都报告了焦虑、抑郁和失眠症状,导致持续疲劳。将工作人员的注意力从照顾转移到隔离的监护执行,引起了相当大的痛苦、内疚和悲伤。(4)向前迈进:大流行突显了养老院环境中的缺陷,导致居民护理质量不足和员工倦怠。一些领导者表示,他们的大流行经历标志着他们职业生涯的意外结束。

结论和意义

养老院领导在疫情期间面临精神压力和过重的工作量。这是一个紧迫的呼吁,要求对系统进行改革,以改善领导的工作条件和居民的护理质量和生活质量。养老院领导有更高的倦怠风险,必须加以解决,以减轻该部门的人员流失。

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