| Literature DB >> 35206987 |
José Luis Díaz-Agea1, Irene Orcajada-Muñoz1, César Leal-Costa2, Maria Gracia Adánez-Martínez3, Adriana Catarina De Souza Oliveira1, Andrés Rojo-Rojo1.
Abstract
The objective of the present study was to determine the subjective impact of the pandemic due to COVID-19 on communication, as perceived by nurses working at emergency services and Intensive Care Units at various hospitals in the Region of Murcia (Spain). A qualitative study was conducted based on the content analysis of 12 semi-structured individual interviews. The participant recruitment process was performed through a snowball sampling technique. Four main dimensions, eleven categories, and two sub-categories were obtained: (1) communication (communicative expressions, both verbal and non-verbal-, and limitations); (2) emotional aspects (positive, negative); (3) overload (first wave, second wave, and third wave); and (4) relationships (health professionals-patients, healthcare professionals, patients-family, and family-health professionals). The main findings of the study show that communication was slightly affected during the pandemic, especially the non-verbal kind, with verbal communication maintained and, in some occasions, strengthened. The lack of training in communication skills and its influence on the management of difficult periods was another important finding. Communication in general deteriorated during the pandemic, especially during the initial waves. Non-verbal communication was more affected due to the use of Personal Protective Equipment and the initial fear of infection, with this finding strongly observed in departments such as emergencies or critical care. The nurses who were interviewed underlined negative emotional aspects associated with a deficit in communication. The positive aspects described were associated with the creation of mutual support spaces and the group cohesion of the work teams during the pandemic. As an implication for current and future clinical practice, we recommend a coordinated institutional response to mitigate the potential emotional effects on workers by designing appropriate communication and emotional expression protocols.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; critical and emergency care; health communication; qualitative research
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206987 PMCID: PMC8872094 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10020373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Main characteristics of the participants.
| Number Code/Sex | Workplace | Age | Experience (Years) | Hospital |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N1/Female | Emergencies | 28 | 3 | H1 |
| N2/Female | COVID Hospital Unit | 37 | 8 | H2 |
| N3/Female | Emergency Radiology Diagnosis | 30 | 5 | |
| N4/Male | Emergencies | 33 | 4 | |
| N5/Male | Emergencies | 27 | 6 | |
| N6/Female | ICU | 41 | 9 | H3 |
| N7/Female | ICU | 31 | 4 | |
| N8/Female | ICU | 53 | 18 | |
| N9/Female | ICU | 32 | 6 | |
| N10/Male | ICU | 34 | 8 | H4 |
| N11/Male | ICU | 33 | 5 | |
| N12/Male | Emergencies | 64 | 20 | H5 |
Script of questions and topics used in the semi-structured interviews.
| Personal experience before the pandemic and initial experiences at the start of the pandemic |
| How would you describe your process of adaptation during the last few months until today? Please explain to me what the process entailed for you to go to work every day in an environment with COVID-positive patients |
| Feelings perceived during the different waves of the pandemic |
| How was the communication between the health professionals and the patients? What happened with the patients subjected to NIV *? |
| Please tell us about any experience about patients who had to be intubated quickly, without being able to say good-bye, if this occurred in your presence |
| Do you think the patient received the same amount of information about his/her disease as if the pandemic had not occurred? |
| Can you describe the communication between health professionals during the pandemic? Do you think communication has been negatively affected? |
| Before the pandemic, do you think you could have better interpreted the mood of a colleague at the hospital? |
| Do you think the relationships between colleagues have been affected by the pandemic? Explain your answer |
| What advice would you give to a colleague who is starting work at the same service you are at in order to effectively communicate with patients and the other health professionals? |
| After the workday, when you are at home, have you had to deal with some feelings? How would describe it/them? |
| As for the training for dealing with the pandemic, what aspects would you highlight? |
| Have you dealt with patients with a communication difficulty or with people who have some type of limitation or disability? Do you think the distancing protocols and personal protection equipment have had an influence on communication? |
| Have you noticed some alterations in communication with respect to the patient’s families and the health professionals during the pandemic? |
* NIV, non-invasive ventilation.
Figure 1Dimensions, categories, and sub-categories.
Main findings of the study.
| Dimension | Category | Sub-Category |
|---|---|---|
| Communication | Communicative expression | Verbal: Verbal communication was affected, especially at the beginning of the pandemic, due to the use of personal protection equipment (mask, screen, robe, etc.) although it is precisely due to this that communication improved over time and was re-enforced between colleagues by the surge in empathetic feelings. Communication by telephone to contact the family was used more than before. The nurses believed that the patients received the same amount of information about their disease. The health professionals who worked directly with COVID-positive patients, at which time a colleague was present to “mirror” them, had better work organization. Communication in situations of emergency was not affected, independent of whether the patient was COVID-19 positive. |
| Non-verbal: Non-verbal communication was more complicated due to the use of PPE (mask). Facial expression was limited so that their attention was more focused on the expression of the eyes or gestures. The participants agreed that before the pandemic, they could better observe the mood of a colleague as compared to the present time due to the use of masks. However, at present, they could still detect the emotions of others as long as they focused their attention on the eyes and gestures. | ||
| Limitations |
Various limitations were found, among which we found elderly who were deaf, people with language barriers, patients who were under non-invasive ventilation, patients in the process of weaning, patients who had undergone a tracheostomy, etc. Other means of communication were utilized for better communication, such as gestures or using paper and pen to write down what they wanted to say. | |
| Emotional aspects | Positive |
The participants underlined positive feelings, such as camaraderie or the feeling of becoming close to their colleagues, and other feelings were found, such as the acquisition of new knowledge and the feeling of overcoming, the special feeling established with the “mirror” colleague, and feelings of solidarity and responsibility. |
| Negative |
The main negative feelings were fear, stress, and physical and psychological wear although other feelings predominated, such as uncertainty, insecurity, chaos, frustration, impotence, and worry. | |
| Overload | First wave |
Lack of PPE, lack of information, greater exposure, greater psychological difficulty, chaos, and in Primary Care, only the more urgent pathologies were tended to in person. |
| Second wave |
The participants had more information, more equipment, and experience. There was less fear and more protocols although these were still changing. The nurses became accustomed to wearing masks and PPE. | |
| Third wave |
The participants characterized it as the hardest period of work due to the pressure on medical care although they were more accustomed to wearing PPE and worked faster. The nurses had more knowledge, and things were more peaceful thanks to the start of vaccination. They agreed that they felt safer due to the use of the PPE. | |
| Relationships | Professionals–patients |
Loss of physical contact and a much more limited communication due to the use of PPE, especially utilized to reduce the virus exposure time. With time, the relationships evolved given the increased knowledge and therefore increased safety. The general perception was that the patients received the same amount of information about their disease, without considering the emotional part (which was impaired). Communication with patients under NIV or with some type of disability was more difficult. |
| Healthcare professionals |
In emergency situations, the communication and actions were the same. Nurses indicated that they had to acquire new knowledge against the clock due to the situation. When speaking about the relationship with their colleagues, they agreed that during the pandemic, a greater camaraderie was observed. The group cohesion was generally strengthened. | |
| Patients–family |
This was the most difficult part, as providing in-person care was very limited to avoid the propagation of the virus, so that a great deficit in communication was observed. We also found differences depending on the hospital service (e.g., hospital floors and ICUs had resources, such as telephones or tablets for the patients to make video calls with their family members, but in the emergency department, this was more complicated). In difficult situations, for example, when patients had to be intubated, they were allowed to speak to their families beforehand as long as it was not an emergency situation. | |
| Family–professionals |
Communication was affected because it could not be in-person although more importance was given to providing information to the families via the telephone. |