Otis Esther, Reid Kathryn B, Sink Lauren K, Scherle Patricia A, Greene-Morris Johnsa
Esther Otis is the staff resilience coordinator, Kathryn B. Reid is the nursing research coordinator, Lauren K. Sink is a direct care RN, Patricia A. Scherle is the current vice president/chief nursing officer, and Johnsa Greene-Morris is the former vice president/chief nursing officer, all at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital in Charlottesville, VA. Contact author: Esther Otis,
Am J Nurs. 2025 Jul 1;125(7):44-49. doi: 10.1097/AJN.0000000000000110. Epub 2025 Jun 26.
When a patient dies, nurses are often quickly assigned a new patient, leading to frustration due to the lack of time to complete postmortem care, care for the deceased patient's family members, or even take a short break. The trauma that nurses experience when a patient dies is underrecognized and contributes to moral distress, burnout, and thoughts of leaving the profession. To address this problem, we developed and implemented a Post-Death Care Team Protocol as a systematic approach to support nurses in the wake of a patient's death and to better support nurses' emotional well-being.
The aim of this program evaluation is to report early focus group and first-year survey data on the impact of the Post-Death Care Team Protocol. Creating and implementing systematic processes that support clinicians' well-being is a complex and iterative process, and this report highlights strategies for success.
The development and evaluation of the protocol was conducted at a medium-sized hospital in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The hospital's staff resilience coordinator developed and implemented the protocol using input from nursing leadership and the hospital administration beginning in March 2022, after a patient's death. The protocol was specifically designed to support the nurse who was assigned to the deceased patient, including protection from immediate additions to the nurse's work assignment, time for one additional short break, and continuing workload protections for the remainder of the shift. The protocol was evaluated using an institutional review board-approved mixed-methods approach (qualitative focus group study and descriptive survey study). Two small focus groups were conducted to learn more about nurses' experiences after a patient's death and about their experiences with the protocol. Descriptive surveys were emailed to RNs who had been assigned to deceased patients at the time of their death; the nurses were asked to complete the survey within about a week after the death. Survey responses from 69 nurses who were associated with 148 patient deaths (a 46.6% response rate) were collected in the first year of protocol implementation and were used to evaluate protocol use, perceived helpfulness, and impact.
Focus group data analysis showed that nurses desire meaningful support after a patient's death, including sufficient time to complete postmortem care and process the event, a supervisor's presence to manage assignment changes, protection from the work overload associated with rapidly arriving admissions, and a reduction in uncompassionate comments from colleagues regarding these desires. Survey results showed that the Post-Death Care Team Protocol was used in 42% of patient deaths in the first year, with rich anecdotal comments highlighting both the positive benefits of using the protocol as well as negative experiences when the protocol wasn't used.
Both focus group and survey findings pointed to process changes that can improve workflow following a patient's death. They also highlighted an ongoing need for culture change regarding the ways in which colleagues can improve support of one another after a patient's death. The protocol addresses system improvements designed to provide meaningful support to nurses and foster institutional culture change concerning nurse well-being in one of the most heart-wrenching aspects of clinical care delivery.
当患者死亡时,护士通常会很快被分配到新患者,由于没有时间完成尸体护理、照顾死者家属,甚至连短暂休息都没有,这会导致护士感到沮丧。护士在患者死亡时所经历的创伤未得到充分认识,这会导致道德困扰、职业倦怠以及离职想法。为了解决这个问题,我们制定并实施了《死亡后护理团队协议》,作为一种系统方法,在患者死亡后支持护士,并更好地维护护士的情绪健康。
本项目评估的目的是报告关于《死亡后护理团队协议》影响的早期焦点小组和第一年调查数据。创建并实施支持临床医生健康的系统流程是一个复杂且反复的过程,本报告突出了成功策略。
该协议的制定和评估在美国中大西洋地区的一家中型医院进行。医院的员工复原力协调员在2022年3月一名患者死亡后,利用护理领导层和医院管理层的意见制定并实施了该协议。该协议专门设计用于支持负责已故患者的护士,包括避免立即增加护士的工作任务、额外增加一次短暂休息时间,以及在轮班剩余时间继续提供工作量保护。该协议采用经机构审查委员会批准的混合方法进行评估(定性焦点小组研究和描述性调查研究)。进行了两个小型焦点小组讨论,以了解更多关于护士在患者死亡后的经历以及他们对该协议的体验。向在患者死亡时被分配照顾已故患者的注册护士发送了描述性调查问卷;要求护士在患者死亡后约一周内完成调查。在协议实施的第一年,收集了与148例患者死亡相关的由69名护士给出的调查回复(回复率为46.6%),并用于评估协议的使用情况、感知的帮助程度和影响。
焦点小组数据分析表明,护士在患者死亡后渴望得到有意义的支持,包括有足够时间完成尸体护理并处理该事件、有主管在场处理工作任务的变更、避免因新入院患者迅速增加而导致工作负担过重,以及减少同事对这些需求的冷漠评论。调查结果显示,在第一年42%的患者死亡案例中使用了《死亡后护理团队协议》,丰富的轶事评论既突出了使用该协议的积极益处,也提到了未使用该协议时的负面经历。
焦点小组和调查结果均指出了可以改善患者死亡后工作流程的流程变化。它们还强调了持续需要在文化方面做出改变,即同事在患者死亡后如何更好地相互支持。该协议涉及旨在为护士提供有意义支持并促进机构文化变革的系统改进,这种变革涉及临床护理中最令人心痛的方面之一——护士的健康。