Yoon Hyo-Jeong, Bae Soon Yeung, Baek Jihyun
Department of Nursing, Yeungnam University College, Daegu, Republic of Korea.
Department of Nursing, Yeungnam University Medical Center, Daegu, Republic of Korea.
BMC Nurs. 2023 Aug 24;22(1):282. doi: 10.1186/s12912-023-01431-5.
Nurses are particularly at risk of suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) owing to their overwhelming workload, risk of infection, and lack of knowledge about the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). PTSD negatively affects an individual's health, work performance, and patient safety. This study aims to assess factors related to PTSD among nurses after providing direct care to COVID-19 patients.
This study is a secondary analysis aimed at identifying factors influencing PTSD among nurses who provided direct care to COVID-19 patients. Data from 168 nurses, collected between October and November 2020, were analyzed. The independent variables were personal, interpersonal, and organizational and COVID-19-related factors (experience of quarantine and direct care of COVID-19 patients), and the dependent variables were PTSD symptoms evaluated based on the PTSD Checklist-5. The nurses' experience of direct care for COVID-19 patients in the designated COVID-19 isolation wards during the first wave of the pandemic (February 2020 to May 2020) was included.
Among the nurses, 18.5% exhibited symptoms of PTSD. When providing direct care to a patient in the designated COVID-19 isolation ward, nurses witnessing the death of a patient (p = .001), low level of nurse staffing (p = .008), and inconvenience of electronic health records programs (p = .034) were associated with PTSD symptoms. The experience of quarantine owing to COVID-19 was also associated with PTSD symptoms (p = .034). Additionally, the higher the nurse managers' ability, leadership, and support of nurses in the current ward, the higher the possibility of lowering nurses' PTSD symptoms (p = .006).
Governments and hospitals should prepare and implement organizational intervention programs to improve nurse managers' leadership, nurse staffing levels, and electronic health records programs. Additionally, because nurses who have witnessed the death of a COVID-19 patient or are self-isolating are vulnerable to PTSD, psychological support should be provided.
由于工作量巨大、感染风险以及对2019冠状病毒病(COVID - 19)缺乏了解,护士尤其容易患上创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。创伤后应激障碍会对个人健康、工作表现和患者安全产生负面影响。本研究旨在评估护士在为COVID - 19患者提供直接护理后与创伤后应激障碍相关的因素。
本研究是一项二次分析,旨在确定影响为COVID - 19患者提供直接护理的护士创伤后应激障碍的因素。分析了2020年10月至11月期间收集的168名护士的数据。自变量为个人、人际、组织以及与COVID - 19相关的因素(隔离经历和对COVID - 19患者的直接护理经历),因变量是根据创伤后应激障碍检查表 - 5评估的创伤后应激障碍症状。纳入了护士在疫情第一波(2020年2月至2020年5月)期间在指定的COVID - 19隔离病房对COVID - 19患者进行直接护理的经历。
在这些护士中,18.5%表现出创伤后应激障碍症状。在指定的COVID - 19隔离病房为患者提供直接护理时,目睹患者死亡的护士(p = 0.001)、护士人员配备水平低(p = 0.008)以及电子健康记录程序不便(p = 0.034)与创伤后应激障碍症状相关。因COVID - 19而进行隔离的经历也与创伤后应激障碍症状相关(p = 0.034)。此外,当前病房护士管理者的能力、领导力和对护士的支持越高,降低护士创伤后应激障碍症状的可能性就越高(p = 0.006)。
政府和医院应准备并实施组织干预计划,以提高护士管理者的领导力、护士人员配备水平和电子健康记录程序。此外,由于目睹COVID - 19患者死亡或正在自我隔离的护士易患创伤后应激障碍,应提供心理支持。