| Literature DB >> 35457319 |
Ester Sierra-García1, Eva María Sosa-Palanca1,2, Carlos Saus-Ortega1,2, Antonio Ruiz-Hontangas3, Raúl Juárez-Vela4, Vicente Gea-Caballero5,6.
Abstract
COVID-19 has significantly affected the work environment of nurses. In the face of the challenges posed by stressors in clinical practice, some nurses adapt and prove to be resilient. In the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nature of care itself and the new ways of working are potentially very stressful. We aim to analyze the resilience of care nurses to the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. This study is a systematic review of nurse caregiver resilience to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021. Our search was conducted in the WOS, Medline/PubMed, Cochrane, BVS/LILACS, and Cuiden databases. The inclusion criteria were: studies published in Spanish or English; carried out from March 2020 to May 2021 on nurses caring for patients with COVID-19; and investigating the factors influencing the psychological impact, resilience, strategies to develop it, and interventions to promote it during this pandemic and others, such as SARS, MERS, or ebola. The quality of the studies and the risk of bias were evaluated following ICROMS, STROBE and AMSTAR-2 criteria. Twenty-two studies were selected. Most of the studies highlighted the presence of stressors in nurses, emphasizing those of the environment, which converged in dysfunctional responses that hurt their resilience. The most persuasive factors were social and organizational support. Coping strategies developed by nurses and especially interventions by organizations were detected as instruments to foster resilience, but have not been well researched. Resilience has a key moderating role in mitigating the psychological impact of nurses in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; coping; nurse; resilience; stress; uncertainty
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457319 PMCID: PMC9029380 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Search strategy.
| Database | Search |
|---|---|
| WOS | ((nurs *) AND (COVID-19)) OR (coronavirus infections)) AND (Resilience, Psychological)) OR (Adaptation, Psychological)) OR (Stress, Psychological)) OR (Burnout, Psychological)) OR (uncertainty) |
| Medine/ | ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (resilience, psychological) Filters: in the last 1 year |
| ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (adaptation, psychological) Filters: in the last 1 year | |
| ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (stress, psychological) Filters: in the last 1 year | |
| Cochrane Library | ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (resilience, psychological) |
| ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (adaptation, psychological) | |
| ((nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections)) AND (stress, psychological) | |
| LILACS/ | (nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections) AND (resilience, psychological) AND |
| (nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections) AND (adaptation, psychological) AND | |
| (nurs *) AND (coronavirus infections) AND (stress, psychological) AND | |
| Cuiden | (“enfermera”) AND ((“COVID-19”) AND (“resiliencia”)) |
| (“enfermera”) AND ((“COVID19”) AND (“afrontamiento”)) | |
| (“enfermera”) AND ((“COVID-19”) AND (“adaptación”)) | |
| (“enfermera”) AND ((“COVID-19”) AND (“agotamiento”)) | |
| (“enfermera”) AND ((“COVID-19”) AND (“estrés”)) |
* Truncation operator that was used as a character truncation to right to find all forms of one word.
Figure 1Flow chart.
Summary of results.
| Author, Year, Location | Design and Sample | Aim | Variables | Results | Quality, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nie et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional, descriptive study. | To identify the prevalence and associated factors of psychological distress among frontline nurses during the COVID-19 outbreak. | Psychological distress, impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. | The risk factors that had the greatest impact on the nurses were: direct contact with patients with COVID-19, doubt about the efficacy of PPE, younger age, and stigmatization. Working overtime and changing work routine was not a risk factor for the nurses in this study. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Lyu et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To explore how organizational identity and psychological resilience affect frontline nurses’ work engagement in coronavirus disease prevention and control 2019 (COVID-19) and to establish the relationship model based on these factors. | Level of resilience, organizational support, and work commitment. | The nurses in the study reported high levels of psychological resilience, which correlated positively with higher levels of perceived organizational support, leading to greater work engagement and quality of work. Resilience showed a mediating role between organizational support and nurses’ work engagement. Higher levels of resilience were also associated with having previously good emotional self-control and ability to adapt to challenges. | STROBE 19/22 |
| Cai et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To investigate psychological abnormality in healthcare workers struggling with the COVID-19 epidemic and to explore associations between social support, resilience, and mental health. | Influencing factors in psychological impact and the psychological responses they can trigger in nurses. | Risk factors influencing worse mental health outcomes were: younger age and lower family and social support, observing the increasing number of COVID-19 cases and deaths, and not having experience in public health emergencies. They tended to develop psychological abnormalities in interpersonal sensitivity, emotional distress, hostility, and obsessive–compulsive behaviors in response. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Cai et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To investigate the psychological impact and coping strategies of frontline medical personnel in Hunan province, adjacent to Hubei province, during the COVID-19 outbreak between January and March 2020. | Stressors and protective factors of healthcare professionals and psychological effects generated by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. | The factors associated with stress were: younger age, shortage of PPE, working in front of patients on the frontline, and seeing news about the evolution of COVID-19. Longer shifts and overtime were not a stressor. | STROBE 19/22 |
| Leng et al., | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To quantify the severity of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and stress of nurses and to explore factors that influence their psychological health when caring for patients with COVID-19. | Regulatory factors of psychological impact on nurses and triggered responses. | The main sources of stress included working in an isolated environment, shortage and prolonged use of PPE, intensity of the workload, contact with patients with COVID-19, lack of family support, and insufficient work experience. These factors generated responses in the nurses’ sleep disturbances, feeling of loneliness, guilt, and fear for their safety. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Luo et al., 2020 [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis. | To assess the updated psychological and mental impact of the COVID-19 pandemic among health care workers. | Risk and protective factors related to psychological impact. | Among health professionals, factors such as being a woman, a nurse, working on the frontline in direct contact with COVID-19 patients, working in the most affected area, not having adequate protective measures, being aware of news about the evolution of COVID-19, and having a lack of training and family support were additionally associated with greater psychological distress. | AMSTAR-2 RATING |
| Cunill et al., | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To describe the physical and psychological symptoms in health care workers caring for patients with COVID-19. | Stressors and psychological and physical responses triggered by psychological impact on nurses. | Shortage of protective material, work overload, working in isolated environments, prolonged use of PPE, being a woman, being a nurse, and having children were detected as stressors. They triggered responses such as uncertainty due to not knowing if they have the disease, helplessness, discomfort, perception of not being able to perform their professional duties effectively, all of which give rise to physical symptoms, such as headaches, arms, legs, back, and precordial pain, fatigue and insomnia, gastrointestinal problems, decreased appetite, dyspnea, dizziness, and/or problems in sexual intercourse. | STROBE 21/22 |
| Luceño-Moreno et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | Analyzing post-traumatic stress, anxiety, and depression during the COVID-19 pandemic. | Influencing factors in the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on nurses and induced responses. | The risk and stress factors were: being a woman, being younger, having less work experience, working in a hospital, being a nurse, having a 12- or 24-hour on-call shift, and living with people at risk. The main responses were: uncertainty and fear of the possibility of being infected and being able to pass it on to family members. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Giusti et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To assess the prevalence of burnout and psychopathological conditions in health professionals working in a healthcare institution in northern Italy and to identify sociodemographic, occupational, and psychological predictors of burnout. | Risk factors and their relationship with psychological symptoms. | Predictors of greater psychological impact were: longer working hours, previous psychological comorbidities, fear of infection, feelings of isolation, less perceived support from friends, female gender, being a nurse, age, working in the hospital, and being in contact with patients with COVID-19. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Labrague y de los Santos 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To examine the relative influence of personal resilience, social support, and organizational support on the reduction in COVID-19 anxiety in frontline nurses. | Regulatory factors of psychological impact in frontline nurses and triggered responses. | The most significant risk factor for the nurses’ discomfort due to the impact of the pandemic was not feeling prepared for the management of patients with COVID-19 and perceiving little organizational and social support. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Kilinç y Çelik. | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To determine the relationship between social support and levels of psychological resilience perceived by nurses in Turkey during the coronavirus disease pandemic-2019 (COVID-19). | Sociodemographic variables. | The nurses’ levels of resilience were moderate. | STROBE 18/22 |
| Zhang et al., 2020 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To identify stressors and burnout among frontline nurses caring for COVID-19 patients in Wuhan and Shanghai and explore perceived effective moral support strategies. | Stressors and responses to them in nurses who cared for patients with COVID-19. | The most frequent stressors among the nurses were: lack of family support, work experience, time spent working in isolation rooms, prolonged use of PPE, and younger age. Among the responses triggered by this were: loneliness, guilt, fear of separation from their families, uncertainty, fear of infection, discomfort due to prolonged use of PPE, and concern about providing poor nursing care. | STROBE 18/22 |
| Kim et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To examine the impact of various factors affecting nurses’ mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. | Influencing factors in nurses in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to their stress level. | The level of stress, anxiety, and distress perceived by the nurses was moderate–severe, higher than that estimated before the pandemic. Predictors of stressors were: patient care with COVID-19, isolation, younger age, fewprofessional experience, and poor family functioning. | STROBE 18/22 |
| Rodríguez-Vega et al., 2020 [ | Qualitative study: exploratory research with a post-intervention evaluation. | Implementing a mindfulness-based intervention for frontline healthcare workers during the COVID-19 outbreak in a general public hospital in Madrid. | Attendance at the session. | More than 3000 sessions were carried out by professionals of Intensive Care Units, COVID-19 Medical Units, and Emergency Services. It was well accepted specifically by nurses and nursing assistants; physicians presented more rejection and were the professionals who attended the least. The intervention was evaluated in the short term and qualified as very useful for reducing stress in frontline health workers, favoring their resilience and reflecting data on feasibility, usefulness, and safety. | ICROMS |
| Pollok et al., | Systematic review. | To assess the effects of interventions aimed at supporting the resilience and mental health of frontline health and social care professionals during and after a disease outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic, as well as the barriers and facilitators to implementing them. | Interventions to promote resilience: related to working conditions; to support basic daily needs; psychological support. | Among the most prominent interventions to foster resilience of health professionals in other outbreaks were: those related to working conditions (regular breaks, shorter working hours, team meetings, relaxation/recreation areas in workplaces, provision of epidemic training for professionals, training of professionals in helping patients and self); to support basic daily needs (food, rest); and those of psychological support (online, group therapies, etc.). A number of barriers were identified, such as lack of awareness of the needs of frontline workers by organizations and limited resources and guidelines, for the successful implementation of resilience-related interventions. | AMSTAR-2 |
| Afshari et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To determine the resilience score and demographic predictors among nurses working in hospitals involved with COVID-19. | Level of resilience. | Nurses’ levels of resilience were low–moderate. | STROBE 18/22 |
| Ou et al., | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | Evaluated the impact of supportive interventions on resilience and self-rated psychopathological symptoms of 92 nurses working in the COVID-19 isolation ward. | Psychopathological symptoms: somatization, obsessive–compulsive behaviors, problems in developing interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobia, paranoid ideation, and psychoticism. | The nurses presented high levels of resilience, which were markedly higher than those obtained in other studies. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Lorente et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To analyze the cross-sectional effect of sources of stress during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic on nurses’ psychological distress, focusing on the mediating role of coping strategies, including problem-focused, emotion-focused, and resilience. | Stressors of nurses on the frontline of care for patients with COVID-19 and their response to those stressors. | Identified stressors: work overload, insufficient preparation to cope with work demands, and lack of support provoked fear of infection and death in nurses. | STROBE 20/22 |
| Rieckert A et al., 2021 [ | Scoping review. | To explore how to develop and maintain the resilience of frontline healthcare professionals exposed to the working conditions of the COVID-19 outbreak. | Interventions before or during the outbreak to build nurse resilience. | Recommendations prior to the outbreak to promote resilience included: optimal provision of education, resilience training, and interventions to create a sense of preparedness for clinical practice. Recommendations during the outbreak consisted of: enhancing resilience through adequate provision of information, psychosocial support, and treatment; monitoring the health status of practitioners; and utilizing various forms and contents of psychosocial support. | AMSTAR-2 |
| Balay-Odao et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To determine predictors of hospital preparedness in the management of patients with COVID-19 and psychological burden and resilience among clinical nurses in addressing the COVID-19 crisis in Saudi Arabia. | Influencing factors in the psychological burden of nurses. | The relevant factors that were revealed as predictors of psychological burden in nurses were: being female, living with family members, being married, working in the emergency area or isolation room, not being trained for the integral management of the patient with COVID-19, and having a low economic level. | STROBE 18/22 |
| Del Pozo-Herce et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To determine the psychological impact of the SARS-CoV-2 virus on nursing professionals working in the Rioja Health Service (Spain). | Stressors and protective factors. | Influencing factors such as being a woman, being younger and less experienced, not having a consolidated contract, having dependent family members, and being in contact with COVID-19 patients gave rise to concerns about fear of becoming infected or infecting their loved ones, making mistakes, as well as negativism, emotional destabilization, and sadness for not providing adequate physical and/or psychoemotional care to the patient’s needs. | STROBE |
| De Pinho et al., 2021 [ | Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. | To explore the association between mental-health-promotion strategies used by nurses during the COVID-19 outbreak and their symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. | Strategies to promote mental health. | Healthy eating, physical activity, resting between shifts, maintaining social contacts, verbalizing feelings/emotions, and spending less time seeking information on COVID-19 were strategies developed by nurses that were associated with better mental health. | STROBE 19/22 |
* LE: level of evidence. ** LR: level of recommendation; *** JBI: Joanna Bridge Institute.
Figure 2Intrapersonal resilience factors, environmental resilience factors, and other factors studied.