Nurse Reports of Moral Distress During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Stephenson Pam1ORCID,Warner-Stidham Andrea1

Affiliation:

1. College of Nursing, Kent State University, Kent, OH, US

Abstract

Background COVID-19 was devastating for many frontline nurses embroiled in health care's response. Most media outlets reported from several large metropolitan areas in New York, California, and Florida, leaving other regions to wonder about the extent to which their nurses were suffering. Objective The purpose of this article was to understand the specific needs and experiences of Northeast Ohio nurses caring for patients with COVID-19 before designing interventions targeting negative mental outcomes. Methods This phenomenological study interviewed 16 Northeast Ohio nurses to understand their experiences of caring for patients with COVID-19. Results Although not asked about it directly, the participants’ stories consistently included details that could be linked to moral distress. Two themes describing their lived experiences included “acquiring moral distress” and “living with moral distress.” Additional findings are also reported separately because although they do not represent the lived experience of COVID-19 nursing, they did represent significant concerns that participants had for the future and are reported here to assist other researchers with the intervention design. Furthermore, these participants thought that participation in support groups with other nurses who cared for COVID-19 patients and possibly led by mental health advanced practice nurses offered the best intervention to process their trauma from the pandemic. Conclusions The long-term effects of moral distress have been discussed routinely in recent literature and are further complicated by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Threats to the shrinking workforce of nurses must be taken seriously and interventions to improve the mental health and morale of frontline nurses must be prioritized and tested.

Funder

Delta Xi Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference24 articles.

1. A year after COVID‐19: Its impact on nurses' psychological well‐being

2. American Association of Critical Care Nurses. (n.d.). Moral Distress in Nursing: What you need to know. https://www.aacn.org/clinical-resources/moral-distress.

3. American Nurses Foundation. (2022). COVID-19 Two Year Impact Assessment Survey. (Pulse on the Nation’s Nurses Survey Series). https://www.nursingworld.org/∼4a2260/contentassets/872ebb13c63f44f6b11a1bd0c74907c9/covid-19-two-year-impact-assessment-written-report-final.pdf.

4. Demoralization: Its Phenomenology and Importance

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