Attitudes and experiences related to the deaths of COVID‐19 patients among nursing staff: A qualitative evidence synthesis

Author:

Gómez‐Brufal‐Flores Manuel1ORCID,Hueso‐Montoro César234ORCID,Esteban‐Burgos Ana Alejandra23ORCID,Montoya‐Juárez Rafael345ORCID,Mota‐Romero Emilio356ORCID,Capilla‐Díaz Concepción35ORCID,Puente‐Fernández Daniel35ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University Hospital Rey Juan Carlos Móstoles Spain

2. Department of Nursing University of Jaén Jaén Spain

3. Instituto de Investigación Biosanitaria ibs.GRANADA Granada Spain

4. Centro de Investigación Mente Cerebro y Comportamiento (CIMCYC) Granada Spain

5. Department of Nursing University of Granada Granada Spain

6. Dr. Salvador Caballero García Primary Care Centre, Andalusian Health Service Government of Andalusia Granada Spain

Abstract

AbstractAimTo identify and synthesize the experiences and attitudes of nursing staff regarding the deaths of COVID‐19 patients.Review MethodsA qualitative evidence synthesis was carried out, using Noblit and Hare's meta‐ethnographic approach. The review protocol was listed in PROSPERO (CRD42022330928). Studies published from January 2020 to January 2022 that met the criteria were searched in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, CINAHL, CUIDEN and PsycInfo. A total of 12 articles were included.ResultsThirty‐three metaphors emerged, which were grouped into three main themes: Determining factors of care, Feelings about death and Strategies for coping with death. Nurses reported the high emotional toll, the absence of family and the lack of staff, protocol and training as determining factors. Furthermore, staff had doubts about the quality of care that COVID‐19 patients received. As coping strategies, nurses developed avoidance behaviours towards COVID‐19 patients, selective memories, resilience, and/or leaving the profession.ConclusionsThe difficulty in providing adequate nursing care and the high number of deaths has increased anxiety and stress among nurses. These factors, alongside their lived experiences of seeing patients suffering, many dying alone without family members, have had psychological repercussions on nursing staff.Implications for the Profession and/or Patient CareThe results demonstrate a high emotional toll and doubts surrounding their caregiving role caused by the lack of professional training needed to face a pandemic. This research shows what has been learned for future pandemics and highlights basic components that could provide a foundation for coping interventions for healthcare professionals.ImpactWhat Problem did the Study Address?The challenges posed by COVID‐19 patient deaths for nursing staff around the world and also by the pandemic circumstances in which those deaths occurred.What were the Main Findings?The high number of deceased patients who were isolated from family members, communication with family members and doubts surrounding care given during the pandemic have created feelings of fear, stress and anxiety, as well as obsessive thoughts that have changed nursing staff's perception of death due to COVID‐19.Where and on whom will the Research have an Impact?Results will be useful for preparing for future pandemics, and for policymakers and health staff in supporting healthcare professionals by creating programmes to help them cope with the emotional toll they have felt after dealing with death in such unprecedented circumstances.Reporting MethodThe authors have adhered to the PRISMA guidelines and the eMERGe Reporting Guidance.Patient or Public ContributionNo patient or public contribution.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

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