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Frontiers in psychiatry. 2023 Mar 13:14:1129268. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1129268 Q23.22025

Occupational stress and burnout among intensive care unit nurses during the pandemic: A prospective longitudinal study of nurses in COVID and non-COVID units

新冠肺炎流行期间重症监护病房护士的压力和职业耗竭:新冠病区与非新冠病区护士的前瞻性纵向研究 翻译改进

Pratima Saravanan  1, Tariq Nisar  1, Qian Zhang  1, Faisal Masud  2, Farzan Sasangohar  1  3

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作者单位

  • 1 Center for Health Data Science and Analytics, Houston Methodist, Houston, TX, United States.
  • 2 Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart and Vascular Center, Houston Methodist, Houston, TX, United States.
  • 3 Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Texas A&M College of Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States.
  • DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1129268 PMID: 36993929

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Background: Intensive care unit (ICU) nurses are highly prone to occupational stress and burnout, affecting their physical and mental health. The occurrence of the pandemic and related events increased nurses' workload and further exacerbated their stress and burnout. This work investigates occupational stress and burnout experienced by ICU nurses working with COVID and non-COVID patients.

    Method: A prospective longitudinal mixed-methods study was conducted with a cohort of ICU nurses working in medical ICU (COVID unit; n = 14) and cardiovascular ICU (non-COVID unit; n = 5). Each participant was followed for six 12-h shifts. Data on occupational stress and burnout prevalence were collected using validated questionnaires. Physiological indices of stress were collected using wrist-worn wearable technologies. Participants elaborated on the causes of stress experienced each shift by completing open-ended questions. Data were analyzed using statistical and qualitative methods.

    Results: Participants caring for COVID patients at the COVID unit were 3.71 times more likely to experience stress (p < 0.001) in comparison to non-COVID unit participants. No differences in stress levels were found when the same participants worked with COVID and non-COVID patients at different shifts (p = 0.58) at the COVID unit. The cohorts expressed similar contributors to stress, based in communication tasks, patient acuity, clinical procedures, admission processes, proning, labs, and assisting coworkers.

    Conclusion: Nurses in COVID units, irrespective of whether they care for a COVID patient, experience occupational stress and burnout.

    Keywords: burnout; critical care; naturalistic study; nursing; physiological variable; stress.

    Keywords:occupational stress; nurse burnout; intensive care unit; covid-19 pandemic

    Copyright © Frontiers in psychiatry. 中文内容为AI机器翻译,仅供参考!

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    期刊名:Frontiers in psychiatry

    缩写:FRONT PSYCHIATRY

    ISSN:1664-0640

    e-ISSN:1664-0640

    IF/分区:3.2/Q2

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    Occupational stress and burnout among intensive care unit nurses during the pandemic: A prospective longitudinal study of nurses in COVID and non-COVID units