Anxiety among Japanese nursing researchers before and after dispatch for COVID‐19 pandemic support: Effects of anxiety‐enhancing and buffering factors

Author:

Imazu Yoko12ORCID,Kondo Akiko13ORCID,Ushikubo Mitsuko14,Kanbara Sakiko15,Kawahara Noriko16,Kondo Mari17

Affiliation:

1. Expert Committee on Support Activities for Disaster Nursing for FY 2021‐2022, Japan Academy of Nursing Science Tokyo Japan

2. Disaster and Critical Care Nursing, Graduate School of Health Care Sciences Tokyo Medical and Dental University Tokyo Japan

3. International Nursing Development, Graduate School of Health Care Sciences Tokyo Medical and Dental University Tokyo Japan

4. Gunma University Maebashi Japan

5. Kobe City College of Nursing Kobe Japan

6. Kyoto Tachibana University Kyoto Japan

7. Kansai Medical University Osaka Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimWe investigated the levels of anxiety and the factors influencing it among Japanese nursing researchers before and after engaging in dispatch support activities during the COVID‐19 pandemic. This study also tested the relationships between pre‐ and post‐relief anxiety and their enhancing and buffering factors.MethodsA web‐based survey was conducted with 9832 members from the Japan Academy of Nursing Science, covering 15 items related to participant attributes such as age and disaster relief qualifications, factors affecting anxiety about support activities such as the content and duration of one activity, and the level of anxiety before and after activities. After performing multiple regression analyses on the effects of the attributes and the factors influencing anxiety before and after support activities, path analysis was conducted on the adopted independent variables to examine their influence on anxiety before and after support activities.ResultsOf the 886 participants, 82.3% were affiliated with educational institutions and 94.8% had no qualifications in disaster relief. Most of the support involved vaccination and activities at health centers. The relationship between pre‐ and post‐relief activities and factors influencing anxiety constituted a high goodness‐of‐fit, with health center assistance being both a direct and indirect reinforcer of post‐relief anxiety.ConclusionsParticipants expressed anxiety enhanced by activities at the health center both before and after support activities in the wake of the COVID‐19 pandemic. Intervention research should examine anxiety‐buffering and ‐enhancing factors, and a support system to respond to rapidly increasing medical needs is necessary.

Publisher

Wiley

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