Abstract
Introduction
Method
Results
Discussion
Key words
Contribution to Emergency Nursing Practice
- •Emergency nurses work in stressful environments exposing them to significant rates of moral distress, traumatic stress, and workplace violence; often leading to a high prevalence of burnout. The impact of COVID-19 on emergency nurses’ trauma and resilience remains under documented.
- •This study contributes to the research on emergency nurses’ lived experiences providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Particularly, how morally injurious situations and trauma impacted nurses’ professional identity.
- •Emergency nurses have been wounded during the pandemic. It is imperative to develop and implement interventions to support nurses’ mental health and well-being and repair nurses’ professional identity.
Introduction
Dressner MA, Kissinger SP. Occupational injuries and illnesses among registered nurses. Monthly Labor Review, US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accessed August 15, 2022. https://doi.org/10.21916/mlr.2018.27
- Song Y.K.
- Mantri S.
- Lawson J.M.
- Berger E.J.
- Koenig H.G.
- Song Y.K.
- Mantri S.
- Lawson J.M.
- Berger E.J.
- Koenig H.G.
- Song Y.K.
- Mantri S.
- Lawson J.M.
- Berger E.J.
- Koenig H.G.
Methods
Theoretical Frameworks
- Simonovich S.D.
- Webber-Ritchey K.J.
- Spurlark R.S.
- et al.
Nurse-specific traumas | Examples from this study |
---|---|
Vicarious/secondary trauma
| “The hardest part was seeing them see their loved ones dying.” |
Historical trauma
| Not discussed |
Workplace violence
| “It’s more of dealing with the general public, where it just becomes a drag. When I come into work, I’m like, who is going to yell at me tonight. People have been attacking staff when we tell them to put a mask on. Patients will say, you’re wrong, you don’t know what you are talking about.” |
System-induced trauma
| “I was just waiting for someone to die for us to change our process. It was such a bizarre process, and it felt like we were hurting people. We didn’t really know what we were doing. It was hard to go to bed at night.” |
Insufficient-resource trauma
| “People have gotten out of nursing altogether, because COVID broke them. We keep trying to get our staffing back to where it needs to be but as soon as we get two people hired, four people leave.” |
Second-victim trauma
| “He was my first patient that’s ever died that I’ve felt physically responsible. That sat with me for a long time. I mean, it just sucks, because we need help in here.” |
Trauma from disasters
| “It’s always hard. Every death or code hits me differently. There have been times where I have to step away. Even if I don’t know the person, I still have to mentally debrief from it.” |
Methods/Design
Sample and Setting
Team
Recruitment
Data Collection Strategy
Losing identity as a nurse |
---|
Potentially moral injurious situations (RMRS 45.9 [SD = 4.6]) |
|
Broken social contract with the community |
|
Betrayal by the organization |
|
Traumatic stress responses to the experience of being a nurse during COVID-19 (IES-R median 28 range 8-73) |
|
Hopelessness and self-preservation (CD-RISC 10 31.2 [SD = 4.6]) |
|
Data Analysis
Results
Losing Identity As a Nurse
Potentially Morally Injurious Situations
- Borges L.M.
- Holliday R.
- Barnes S.M.
- et al.
Broken Social Contract with the Community
- Fry-Bowers E.K.
- Rushton C.H.
Betrayal by the Organization
Traumatic Stress Responses to the Experience of Being a Nurse During COVID-19
Hopelessness and Self-Preservation
Discussion
- Murphy D.
- Ross J.
- Ashwick R.
- Armour C.
- Busuttil W.
- Fry-Bowers E.K.
- Rushton C.H.
Limitations
Implications for Emergency Nurses
- Calma E.
- Sayin Y.
- Simonovich S.D.
- Webber-Ritchey K.J.
- Spurlark R.S.
- et al.
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Author Disclosures
References
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