The impact of COVID‐19 on mental health and well‐being in critical care nurses – a longitudinal, qualitative study

Author:

Credland Nicola1ORCID,Griffin Martyn2,Hamilton Peter3,Harness Oonagh4,McMurray Robert5

Affiliation:

1. Reader, Faculty of Health Sciences The University of Hull, Cottingham Road Hull UK

2. Sheffield University Management School Sheffield University Sheffield UK

3. Human Resource Management Durham University Business School, Durham University Durham UK

4. Lecturer in Critical Management and Org Studies, Newcastle Business School Northumbria University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

5. Graduate School of Healthcare Management (GSM) Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Dublin Ireland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe COVID‐19 pandemic has had both a psychological and physiological effect on the human race. For those working in health care, particularly in critical care, the pandemic has put unprecedented strain on staff. Witnessing suffering during crisis in an organizational setting can be a traumatic experience and critical care nurses often risked, not only their own lives, but their psychological well‐being, so that those infected with the virus might have a better chance at survival.AimThe aim of this study was to explore the challenges to mental health and psychological well‐being experienced by Critical Care Nurses during the COVID‐19 pandemic.Study DesignA longitudinal, qualitative study involving semi‐structured interviews with 54 critical care nurses across 38 hospitals in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsFour key themes were identified which represent the challenges faces by critical care nurses during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Lack of control, Psychological trauma, Unexpected leadership, Public‐political betrayal.ConclusionsWhile public‐political praise may lead to a short‐term lift in morale for front line workers; where it is not accompanied by practical support in terms of appropriate equipment, leadership, emotional support and renumeration it is likely to be damaging in the longer term.Relevance to Clinical PracticeThis study has provided a greater understanding of the factors which affected the well‐being and mental health of critical care nurses during a global pandemic.

Funder

British Association of Critical Care Nurses

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Critical Care Nursing

Reference38 articles.

1. An Official Critical Care Societies Collaborative Statement

2. 2020 - The Year that needed the nurse: Considerations for critical care nursing research and practice emerging in the midst of COVID-19

3. World Health Organization.COVID‐19: Occupational health and safety for health workers Interim guidance.2021Accessed November 02 2022.https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-HCW_advice-2021-1

4. National Health Service.Coronavirus: principles for increasing the nursing workforce in response to exceptional increased demand in adult critical care.2020Accessed November 02 2022. Available from:www.nmc.org.uk/news/coronavirus/how-we-will-regulate

5. Impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic on critical care healthcare workers' depression, anxiety, and stress levels

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