Hospital nurses’ moral distress and mental health during COVID-19

Source avec lien : Journal of Advanced Nursing, (Prépublication). 10.1111/jan.15013

L’objectif de cette étude était d’explorer les facteurs associés à la détresse morale des infirmières pendant la première vague de COVID-19 et leur santé mentale à plus long terme. Conception Étude transversale et corrélationnelle.

Aims To explore factors associated with nurses’ moral distress during the first COVID-19 surge and their longer-term mental health. Design Cross-sectional, correlational survey study. Methods Registered nurses were surveyed in September 2020 about their experiences during the first peak month of COVID-19 using the new, validated, COVID-19 Moral Distress Scale for Nurses. Nurses’ mental health was measured by recently experienced symptoms. Analyses included descriptive statistics and regression analysis. Outcome variables were moral distress and mental health. Explanatory variables were frequency of COVID-19 patients, leadership communication and personal protective equipment/cleaning supplies access. The sample comprised 307 nurses (43% response rate) from two academic medical centres. Results Many respondents had difficulty accessing personal protective equipment. Most nurses reported that hospital leadership communication was transparent, effective and timely. The most distressing situations were the transmission risk to nurses’ family members, caring for patients without family members present, and caring for patients dying without family or clergy present. These occurred occasionally with moderate distress. Nurses reported 2.5 days each in the past week of feeling anxiety, withdrawn and having difficulty sleeping. Moral distress decreased with effective communication and access to personal protective equipment. Moral distress was associated with longer-term mental health. Conclusion Pandemic patient care situations are the greatest sources of nurses’ moral distress. Effective leadership communication, fewer COVID-19 patients, and access to protective equipment decrease moral distress, which influences longer-term mental health. Impact Little was known about the impact of COVID-19 on nurses’ moral distress. We found that nurses’ moral distress was associated with the volume of care for infected patients, access to personal protective equipment, and communication from leaders. We found that moral distress was associated with longer-term mental health. Leaders should communicate transparently to decrease nurses’ moral distress and the negative effects of global crises on nurses’ longer-term mental health.

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