Affiliation:
1. Yeungnam University College
2. Yeungnam University Medical Center
3. Jeonbuk National University
Abstract
Abstract
Background
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 directly caring for patients with COVID-19.
Methods
This study is a secondary analysis aimed at identifying factors influencing PTSD among nurses who directly cared for 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 patients with COVID-19), 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) were included.
Results
Among the nurses, 18.5% exhibited symptoms of PTSD. When directly caring for 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 (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).
Conclusions
Governments and hospitals should prepare and implement organizational intervention programs to improve nurse manager leadership, nurse staffing levels, and electronic health records programs. Additionally, because nurses who have witnessed the death of a COVID-19 patient or who are self-isolating are vulnerable to PTSD, psychological support should be provided.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference42 articles.
1. Zhu N, Zhang D, Wang W, Li X, Yang B, Song J, Zhao X, Huang B, Shi W, Lu R et al. A Novel Coronavirus from Patients with Pneumonia in China, 2019. NEJM 2020, 382(8):727–733.
2. World Health Organization: Coronavirus (COVID-19) dashboard. 2022. https://covid19.who.int. Accessed 10 Jan 2023.
3. Systematic assessment of South Korea's capabilities to control COVID-19;Yoo KJ;Health Policy,2021
4. Mental health status of medical staff in emergency departments during the Coronavirus disease 2019 epidemic in China;Song X;Brain Behav Immun,2020
5. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-5). American Psychiatric Pub; 2013.