Litcius/Paper detail

How the <scp>COVID</scp> ‐19 crisis affected the well‐being of nurses working in paediatric critical care: A qualitative study

Jackson Pountney, Isabelle Butcher, Peter Donnelly, Rachael Morrison, Rachel Shaw

2023British Journal of Health Psychology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Evidence shows paediatric critical care (PCC) nurses display high rates of burnout, moral distress, symptoms associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and poor well-being. The COVID-19 pandemic magnified these pressures producing extremely challenging working conditions. The objective was to understand PCC nurses' lived experience of working during COVID-19 to determine the impact it had on their well-being. DESIGN: A qualitative design was used with individual, semi-structured online interviews analysed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Ten nurses from six PCC units in England participated. Five themes were generated: (i) Challenges of working in Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), (ii) Adapting to redeployment to adult intensive care, (iii) Changes to staff working relationships, (iv) Being unable to attain work-life balance and (v) Unprocessed traumatic experiences of working in COVID-19. It was clear COVID-19 presented novel challenges to PCC nurses' well-being. With those came enforced changes in practice; some were temporary, for example use of PPE and redeployment, but others provided insight into the prerequisites for good staff well-being, for example strong professional relationships, work-life balance and managing one's psychological health. CONCLUSIONS: Findings show authentic connections between peers, verbal and non-verbal communication and a sense of belonging were crucial to nurses' well-being. A dent in PCC nurses' perceived competence significantly affected their well-being. Finally, staff need a psychologically safe space to process distress and trauma experienced during COVID-19. Future research needs to test evidence-based, theoretically-informed well-being interventions to improve and maintain PCC nurses' well-being.

Topics & Concepts

Thematic analysisBurnoutPsychologyNursingDistressPsychological interventionCompetence (human resources)Qualitative researchCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Personal protective equipmentMedicineClinical psychologySocial psychologySocial scienceSociologyDiseasePathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)Healthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutCOVID-19 and Mental HealthNursing education and management