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COVID-19 期间人员调配对护士福祉、绩效和留任意愿的影响:一项混合方法研究(REDEPLOY)

The impact of redeployment during COVID-19 on nurse well-being, performance and retention: a mixed-methods study (REDEPLOY).

作者信息

Hartley Hannah, Dunning Alice, Murray Jenni, Simms-Ellis Ruth, Unsworth Kerrie, Grange Angela, Dunn Michael, Marran Jayne, Joseph Olivia, Essler Pam, Archibong Uduak, Johnson Judith, Lawton Rebecca

机构信息

Yorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Temple Bank House, Bradford Royal Infirmary, Bradford, UK.

Business School, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.

出版信息

Health Soc Care Deliv Res. 2025 Apr;13(17):1-50. doi: 10.3310/EWPE7103.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Mass redeployment of nurses was critical to the National Health Service response to COVID-19. There remains little understanding of how redeployment was enacted during the pandemic and its impact on nurse managers' and nurses' mental health and well-being, job performance and retention. This study aimed to understand how nurse redeployment was managed prior to and during COVID-19; explore how nurses made sense of redeployment; and the impact on their mental health and well-being, job performance and retention intentions.

DESIGN

A mixed methods approach utilising semistructured interviews, focus groups and surveys with nurse managers and nurses.

SETTING

Three National Health Service acute hospital trusts.

PARTICIPANTS

Thirty-eight nurse managers and human resources advisors participated in interviews and focus groups. Sixty-three nurses who were redeployed or worked with redeployed nurses participated in interviews and surveys over three time points between March 2021 and February 2022.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Interviews asked nurse managers about redeployment decisions and nurses about their redeployment experiences. Interview data were analysed using thematic and pen portrait analyses. The survey measured well-being, performance and intentions to leave. Multilevel modelling was conducted to explore relationships between variables over time.

RESULTS

Seven themes were identified that illustrate the redeployment process, decisions made, and the impact on nurse managers and nurses. Nurse managers redeployed nurses in response to directives focused on numbers of staff and allowable staff:patient ratios, whereas their decisions were more often person focused. This raised logistical and emotional challenges for nurse managers and a disconnect in the levels of the chain of command regarding the needs of nurses. Most reported feeling like they were treated as a commodity, with redeployment having profound impacts on their mental health, well-being, job performance and retention. The longitudinal pen portrait analysis revealed three 'journeys' that represented how nurses made sense of their redeployment, underpinned by two themes: nurse identity and organisational identification. Journeys ranged from those who retained their professional identity and organisational identification (journey one) through to those who experienced a demolition of dual identities (journey three). While most staff in all journeys reported burnout, psychological distress, anxiety, depression and intention to leave their jobs, this was more frequent and severe for those experiencing journey three. These findings, together with stakeholder input, informed the development of 11 recommendations for policy and practice.

LIMITATIONS

Nurses from minority ethnic backgrounds are under-represented in the sample despite efforts to encourage participation. The quantitative data were planned to be collected at discrete time points during the COVID pandemic for each trust but gaps between data collection time points were compromised by the challenge of ongoing COVID waves and the different set-up times for each trust.

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK

Mass redeployment of nurses in response to the COVID-19 pandemic prioritised nurse staffing numbers over staff well-being. Redeployment had a profound impact on nurse managers and nurses with significant and concerning implications reported for nurse well-being, performance and retention. The recommendations for policy and practice will require active endorsement and widespread dissemination and would benefit from evaluation to assess impact.

FUNDING

This synopsis presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme as award number NIHR132041.

摘要

背景

护士的大规模重新部署对于英国国家医疗服务体系应对新冠疫情至关重要。对于在疫情期间重新部署是如何实施的,以及它对护士长和护士的心理健康与福祉、工作表现及留任意愿的影响,目前仍知之甚少。本研究旨在了解在新冠疫情之前及期间护士重新部署是如何管理的;探究护士如何理解重新部署;以及其对护士的心理健康与福祉、工作表现及留任意愿的影响。

设计

采用混合方法,对护士长和护士进行半结构化访谈、焦点小组讨论及调查。

地点

三个英国国家医疗服务体系的急症医院信托机构。

参与者

38名护士长和人力资源顾问参与了访谈和焦点小组讨论。63名被重新部署或与被重新部署护士共事的护士在2021年3月至2022年2月期间的三个时间点参与了访谈和调查。

数据收集与分析

访谈询问护士长关于重新部署的决策,询问护士关于他们的重新部署经历。访谈数据采用主题分析和人物特写分析。该调查测量了幸福感、工作表现及离职意愿。进行多水平建模以探究随时间推移变量之间的关系。

结果

确定了七个主题,阐明了重新部署过程、所做决策以及对护士长和护士的影响。护士长根据侧重于员工数量和允许的医护比的指令重新部署护士,而他们的决策更多时候是以个人为中心。这给护士长带来了后勤和情感方面的挑战,并且在指挥链层级上关于护士需求存在脱节。大多数人报告感觉自己被当作商品对待,重新部署对他们的心理健康、福祉、工作表现及留任意愿产生了深远影响。纵向人物特写分析揭示了三种“历程”,代表了护士如何理解他们的重新部署,其基础是两个主题:护士身份认同和组织认同。历程范围从那些保留其职业身份和组织认同的人(历程一)到那些经历双重身份瓦解的人(历程三)。虽然所有历程中的大多数员工都报告有职业倦怠、心理困扰、焦虑、抑郁及离职意愿,但对于经历历程三的人来说,这些情况更频繁且更严重。这些发现,连同利益相关者的意见,为制定11项政策和实践建议提供了依据。

局限性

尽管努力鼓励参与,但少数族裔背景的护士在样本中的代表性不足。定量数据原计划在新冠疫情期间为每个信托机构在离散的时间点收集,但由于持续的新冠疫情浪潮带来的挑战以及每个信托机构不同的设置时间,数据收集时间点之间存在差距。

结论与未来工作

为应对新冠疫情而进行的护士大规模重新部署将护士人员配备数量置于员工福祉之上。重新部署对护士长和护士产生了深远影响,对护士的福祉、工作表现及留任意愿报告了重大且令人担忧的影响。这些政策和实践建议将需要积极认可和广泛传播,并将受益于评估以评估其影响。

资金

本摘要展示了由英国国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)卫生与社会保健交付研究计划资助的独立研究,资助编号为NIHR132041。

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