Elsharkawy Nadia Bassuoni, Ramadan Osama Mohamed Elsayed, Hafiz Alaa Hussain, Katooa Nouran Essam, Abunar Areej, Attallah Dena Marwan A, Dewan Mashael, Alruwaili Majed Mowanes, Alruwaili Abeer Nuwayfi, Abdelaziz Enas Mahrous, Alkhadam Arab Qassim, Ouda Marwa Mohamed
Department of Maternal and Child Health Nursing, College of Nursing, Jouf University, Sakaka, 72388, Saudi Arabia.
Maternity and Child Health Department, Faculty of Nursing, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, 24123, Saudi Arabia.
BMC Nurs. 2025 Jul 2;24(1):822. doi: 10.1186/s12912-025-03509-8.
Neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) nurses face profound emotional distress due to frequent exposure to infant loss. This emotional burden, coupled with limited organizational support, can lead to significant psychological and professional challenges. Cultural and religious contexts uniquely shape resilience and coping mechanisms, particularly within Saudi Arabia, where these aspects remain understudied.
To explore and describe the lived experience of resilience and coping strategies among neonatal intensive care nurses following infant loss in NICUs in northern Saudi Arabia.
An interpretive phenomenological design grounded in Heidegger's hermeneutic tradition was employed, with Lazarus and Folkman's stress and coping theory providing the theoretical framework for analysis. Eighteen registered nurses from four NICUs (three public, one private) participated in semi-structured interviews and completed reflective journals. Purposive sampling ensured diversity in professional experience, cultural backgrounds, and religious affiliations. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis with concurrent collection and interpretation.
Four thematic domains characterized NICU nurses' experiences: (1) Emotional Processing of Loss (initial grief, disenfranchised professional grief, cultural-religious interpretations); (2) Adaptive Coping (faith-based practices, selective detachment, end-of-life ritualization, meaning-making through family support); (3) Resilience Development (career-stage evolution, professional identity integration, post-traumatic growth); and (4) Contextual Influences (institutional support disparities, multicultural team dynamics, resource constraints).
NICU nurses' experiences of infant loss profoundly impact their psychological and professional well-being. Despite emotional and organizational challenges, nurses actively employ diverse coping strategies that are deeply influenced by their cultural and religious beliefs. Over time, these strategies facilitate significant professional growth and sustained compassion.
Healthcare institutions should adopt structured, culturally sensitive interventions, including formal debriefing, psychological support services, and education programs that focus on resilience-building, to enhance the well-being and professional sustainability of NICU nurses.
Not Applicable.
新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的护士由于频繁接触婴儿死亡,面临着巨大的情感困扰。这种情感负担,再加上组织支持有限,可能导致重大的心理和职业挑战。文化和宗教背景独特地塑造了适应力和应对机制,特别是在沙特阿拉伯,这些方面仍未得到充分研究。
探索并描述沙特阿拉伯北部新生儿重症监护病房护士在婴儿死亡后的适应力和应对策略的生活经历。
采用基于海德格尔诠释学传统的诠释现象学设计,以拉扎勒斯和福克曼的压力与应对理论为分析的理论框架。来自四个新生儿重症监护病房(三个公立,一个私立)的18名注册护士参与了半结构化访谈并完成了反思日记。目的抽样确保了专业经验、文化背景和宗教信仰的多样性。使用主题分析法进行数据收集和分析。
新生儿重症监护病房护士的经历有四个主题领域:(1)丧失的情感处理(最初的悲伤、被剥夺权利的职业悲伤、文化宗教诠释);(2)适应性应对(基于信仰的做法、选择性超脱、临终仪式化、通过家庭支持赋予意义);(3)适应力发展(职业阶段演变、职业身份整合、创伤后成长);(4)背景影响(机构支持差异、多元文化团队动态、资源限制)。
新生儿重症监护病房护士经历婴儿死亡对其心理和职业幸福感有深远影响。尽管存在情感和组织方面的挑战,但护士积极采用受其文化和宗教信仰深刻影响的多种应对策略。随着时间的推移,这些策略促进了显著的职业成长和持续的同情心。
医疗机构应采用结构化的、对文化敏感的干预措施,包括正式的汇报、心理支持服务以及侧重于培养适应力的教育项目,以提高新生儿重症监护病房护士的幸福感和职业可持续性。
不适用。