Usberg Gerli, Clari Marco, Conti Alessio, Põld Mariliis, Kalda Ruth, Kangasniemi Mari
University of Tartu.
Tartu Health Care College.
Nurs Ethics. 2024 Dec;31(8):1674-1687. doi: 10.1177/09697330241255936. Epub 2024 Jun 4.
The global pandemic raised ethical issues for nurses about caring for all patients, not just those with COVID-19. Italy was the first European country to be seriously affected by the first wave, while Estonia's infection and death rates were among the lowest in Europe. Did this raise different ethical issues for nurses in these two countries as well?
The aim was to describe and compare ethical issues between nurses working during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Estonia and Italy.
A cross-sectional survey study with a self-administered questionnaire. questionnaire was used.
Convenience sampling was used to recruit 1098 nurses working during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020: 162 from Estonia and 936 from Italy.
Research ethics approvals were obtained, and the nurses provided informed consent.
The most frequent ethical issues for Estonian nurses were professional communication and ensuring access to care for patients without COVID-19, and for Italian nurses, the end-of-life care and the risk of them getting the virus and transmitting it to their loved ones. There were no statistically significant differences in the frequency of ethical issues between Estonian nurses working with patients with and without COVID-19. Italian nurses caring for COVID-19 patients faced statistically significantly more (both < .001) issues around prioritising patients and end-of-life. Nurses working with patients without COVID-19 in Italy faced more issues about access to care ( < .001).
Estonian and Italian nurses, working in different clinical contexts during the first wave of the pandemic, faced different ethical issues. Local contextual aspects need to be considered to support nurses' ethical decision-making in providing care during future crises and to ensure ethical care for patients.
全球大流行给护士带来了关于护理所有患者的伦理问题,而不仅仅是那些感染新冠病毒的患者。意大利是首个受到第一波疫情严重影响的欧洲国家,而爱沙尼亚的感染率和死亡率在欧洲处于最低水平。这是否也给这两个国家的护士带来了不同的伦理问题呢?
旨在描述和比较爱沙尼亚和意大利在新冠疫情第一波期间工作的护士所面临的伦理问题。
采用自填式问卷进行横断面调查研究。
采用便利抽样法招募了2020年疫情第一波期间工作的1098名护士:162名来自爱沙尼亚,936名来自意大利。
获得了研究伦理批准,护士们提供了知情同意。
爱沙尼亚护士最常遇到的伦理问题是专业沟通以及确保非新冠患者获得护理,而意大利护士面临的是临终护理以及自身感染病毒并传染给亲人的风险。在爱沙尼亚,护理新冠患者和非新冠患者的护士在伦理问题发生频率上没有统计学显著差异。意大利护理新冠患者的护士在患者优先级排序和临终护理方面面临的问题在统计学上显著更多(均P <.001)。在意大利,护理非新冠患者的护士在获得护理方面面临更多问题(P <.001)。
在疫情第一波期间,爱沙尼亚和意大利的护士在不同临床环境中工作,面临着不同的伦理问题。需要考虑当地背景因素,以支持护士在未来危机期间提供护理时的伦理决策,并确保为患者提供符合伦理的护理。