Worry and fear as predictors of fatalism by COVID-19 in the daily work of nurses

Author:

Zeladita-Huaman Jhon Alex1ORCID,Zegarra-Chapoñan Roberto2ORCID,Castro-Murillo Rosa3ORCID,Surca-Rojas Teresa Catalina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru

2. Universidad María Auxiliadora, Peru; Ministerio de Salud, Peru

3. Universidad María Auxiliadora, Peru

Abstract

Abstract Objective: to analyze the relationship between the concern and fear of COVID-19 with fatalism in the daily work of nurses. Method: analytical cross-sectional study carried out with a total of 449 nurses. Data collection was performed using instruments validated in Peru. In the analysis, the Shapiro-Wilk test and the Spearman correlation coefficient were used, and two multiple regression models were estimated, with variable selection in stages. Results: nurses had a moderate level of fatalism and a low level of fear and concern about COVID-19. The first statistical model, which included sociodemographic variables, explains only 3% of the fatalism variance. However, a second model that includes fear and perception explains 33% of it. Conclusion: Worry, fear and having been diagnosed with COVID-19 were predictors of fatalism. It is suggested the implementation of psycho-emotional interventions in daily work - aimed at Nursing professionals who present high levels of fear or concern - to reduce fatalism and prevent fatal consequences of the pandemic and promote health.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Reference31 articles.

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