| Literature DB >> 35522185 |
Madlen Hörold1, Karl Philipp Drewitz1, Julia Piel1, Ilona Hrudey1, Magdalena Rohr2,3, Vreni Brunnthaler2, Claudia Hasenpusch1, Angela Ulrich1, Niklas Otto1,4, Susanne Brandstetter3, Christian Apfelbacher1.
Abstract
Faced with the pandemic of the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2), healthcare professionals (HCPs) in intensive care units (ICU) adjusted their organizational, operational, and personal procedures to ensure care for COVID-19 patients. We used grounded theory approach to explore ICU HCPs' perspectives on professional action at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany from March to July 2020. The study aimed to examine implicit principles on negotiating social practice and interaction of ICU HCPs in an exceptional situation, which was characterized by a high level of changes. We conducted theme-guided qualitative telephone/virtual interviews with 39 ICU HCPs from ten German federal states. The data collection followed the principles of theoretical sampling. We adpoted grounded theory approach proposed by Charmaz and discussed using Lüscher's theoretical concept of ambivalence. The analysis revealed five interconnected categories about the ICU HCPs' negotiation of social practice and interaction at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany. In this context, a complex field of ambivalence (key category) emerged between habits and routines of a pre-pandemic normality. Pragmatic restructuring processes were initiated, which quickly resulted in a new normality of a "daily routine of preparation". Dealing with ambivalence offers the potential for change.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; acute critical care; ambivalence; frontline workers; intensive care unit; pandemic experience; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35522185 PMCID: PMC9082755 DOI: 10.1177/00469580221081059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inquiry ISSN: 0046-9580 Impact factor: 2.099
Characteristics of the Study Participants.
| pseudonym | age | working experience (years) | position and care level acc. to Bormann and Swart
| characteristics (in vivo) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Peter Distelmeyer (m) | 30 | 3,5 | ICU clinician in training, basic and regular care hospital | “[I made] very encouraging and satisfying experiences.” |
| 2 | Elisabeth Huber (f) | 42 | 15 | ICU senior clinician, centralized care hospital | “You’re making decisions for the safety of the whole team.” |
| 3 | Christoph Faber (m) | 43 | 17 | ICU clinician, regular care hospital | “[…] it was a time of many yeses, when everybody said: Sure, we’ll do it that way! [A time] when there was less discussion.” |
| 4 | Helene Wustrow (f) | 38 | 10 | ICU clinician, basic care hospital | “And for my nurses in the beginning, it was like, ‘Yeah, and if you get infected, you’ll die,’ and that’s kind of-. The thought had to get out of their heads.” |
| 5 | Jens Mantel (m) | 44 | 17 | ICU senior clinician, maximum care hospital | “So it was (.) very hectic during that time. Um, because new structures had to be created constantly and new problems came up constantly. And then there was this outbreak situation […] in the clinic there was […] restlessness […].” |
| 6 | Kristin Baumann (f) | 26 | 3 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “Because I’m now working on this Corona ward, I know that this is quite good, the staff were asked whether it would be okay for them to work with infected patients.” |
| 7 | Uwe Michaelis (m) | 53 | 25 | ICU senior clinician, head of the internal ICU, maximum care hospital | “[I] almost fear that [health care professionals] will be forgotten again in three or four months for all the work that has been done.” |
| 8 | Bianka Beyer (f) | 23 | 2 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “Sometimes you just had the feeling that everybody who doesn’t have corona falls (…) a little bit behind […]” |
| 9 | Karsten Steffen (m) | 52 | 26 | ICU senior clinician and deputy leader emergency room, centralized care hospital | “We were not initially able to protect the staff in the way that was necessary.” |
| 10 | Karl Mohn (m) | 59 | 34 | ICU senior clinician, regular care hospital | “It’s a bit like being stranded by plane in the desert somewhere.” |
| 11 | Herbert Meister (m) | 57 | 35 | ICU nurse, ward manager, maximum care hospital | “There were real troops that ultimately swept through the ward and turned them over one by one. And that has-. Yes. Honestly, I experienced more of a sense of optimism than depression.” |
| 12 | Stefan Meihofer (m) | 54 | 27 | ICU head clinician, centralized care hospital | “A colleague of mine […] He bought a 3D printer a year and a half ago and immediately sat down at home and started it up, so that in principle we only had all the other - um, what do I know about colleagues - uploaded something (pause) makeshift masks on YouTube and we already got them [ready]. […]” |
| 13 | Thomas Steiner (m) | 45 | 17 | ICU head clinician, maximum care hospital | “I would never go to the Congo or anywhere to get any SARS, MERS or EBOLA or hemorrhagic fever, I’m way too scared of and [I am] also not tired of living, but that’s something I can avoid, I can go volunteer for that. Here [in this situation], I can’t volunteer.” |
| 14 | Malte Efferz (m) | 34 | >6 | Ward manager, centralized care hospital | “There has been excellent collaboration on all of these restructuring and organizational issues.” |
| 15 | Samuel Geib (m) | 28 | 4 | ICU nurse and medical student, maximum care hospital | “We had a few things left over from the Ebola situation. And we put on a hazmat suit, so to speak. And two to three layers of gloves accordingly. A face visor. Um, so as not to have any surface exposed. It was also one of those moments where I really took a shower for the first time during a shift […].” |
| 16 | Felix Lanthaler (m) | 38 | 13 | ICU clinician, maximum care hospital | “I think we’ve used all opportunities we’ve had here in the house [clinic] to prepare for this.” |
| 17 | Tina Hirsch (f) | 34 | 14 | ICU nurse, Helicopter Emergency Medical Services Technical Crew (HEMS-TC), maximum care hospital | “I don’t know what they [nurses] are always afraid of, that’s a problem, because you can get a job in nursing anywhere today, but we are so submissive and the lobby of the physicians is so big. Um, but if we don’t use the opportunity now, then we don’t need to use it anymore, because then we’ve wasted it. So we have to make an effort now.” |
| 18 | Heidi Schneider (f) | 25-30 | 5 | ICU nurse, non-medical student, maximum care hospital | “Currently it works, but the hygiene guidelines are also adjusted so that the [equipment] also has to be enough. That means I take one mask, throughout the day, for all patients. Which is certainly not standard, under normal circumstances [not] hygienic, and above all most were afraid or also themselves that they themselves are not protected enough, because we would normally take one mask for one patient round […] and currently as I said for eight hours. At the beginning it was very, very uncertain ‘am I still protected at all if I only wear one mask for so long?’ Beside the fact that germs or viruses, bacteria, whatever, are transferred from patient to patient, but I think that the team is doing a good job. And the situation is also stable.” |
| 19 | Julian Meyer (m) | 27 | 11 | ICU nurse and instructor, basic and regular care hospital | “[…] then I quite consciously avoided a bit of contact, did not wanted the contact with other people now and, of course, the whole-, ‘oh God, do I have a scratchy throat now? Do I have temperature?’ You slept badly […]” |
| 20 | Anke Bäcker (f) | 37 | 17 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “[…] for many [colleagues] this is impossible, they said they would no longer work if there were no FFP-3 masks to put on again […]” |
| 21 | Martin Kurtz (m) | 42 | 15 | ICU head clinician, centralized care hospital | “[…] We are prepared […] there I am glad that we know in the future, we simply have a plan that has really proven itself in the crisis, it works.” |
| 22 | Rebecca Amann (f) | 28 | 1 | Clinician in training in internal medicine, | “[…] when you have a car crash and you’re like in the last seconds and you want to brake and the wall is getting closer and closer and you realize the brakes aren’t working […]” |
| 23 | Helena Kluge (f) | 20-25 | 6 | ICU nurse and medical student, maximum care hospital | “So I have demands on myself and if I can’t keep them, because of course everything is an unfamiliar situation for me, then it’s difficult for me when I have to do things that I learned differently.” |
| 24 | Kerstin Jäger (m) | 42 | 24 | ICU nurse, centralized care hospital | “This is my third world war.” |
| 25 | Stefan Bieber (m) | 28 | 9 | ICU nurse and ward manager, regular care hospital | “[…] but regarding the implementation, uh, the plan (.) is good but the implementation is miserable. So and that’s why there were already [COVID-19] cases now […]” |
| 26 | Gerald Schröter (m) | 58 | 31 | ICU head clinician, centralized care hospital | “[…] You stand, because if you are somehow the head of a ward, you are, to a certain extent, autonomous. That means, of course, you have to justify yourself in your immediate environment, but you are still-, you can go through your therapy with a certain self-confidence, I would say. That’s true, of course, that during the COVID time-, there was always a certain insecurity, so one felt observed, because it was also a ward that was composed of several-, that was composed of two clinics. […]” |
| 27 | Margret Müller (f) | 55 | 34 | ICU nurse and ward manager, centralized care hospital | “That was nevertheless exciting to see how now this coronavirus, I’ll say, amplifies a completely different kind of anxiety all over again.” |
| 28 | Svenja Fischer (f) | 40 | 13 | ICU nurse, centralized care hospital | “The first bad thing for us was actually that we had to take austerity measures during this time.” |
| 29 | Hanna Läufert (f) | 50 | 23 | ICU nurse and deputy ward manager, centralized care hospital | “[…] then you first went home [after work] and didn’t turn anything on at first. So I didn’t do anything. I didn’t turn on the TV, I didn’t turn on the radio, I said, ‘I can’t listen to it anymore.’ Because it’s just so out of reach.” |
| 30 | Carolin Kunze (f) | 35 | >10 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “[…] I hope and really pray all the time that it won’t be as bad as in Italy or France. That is actually my big hope at the moment. That I think it’s not going to be that bad. We are in Germany - we are, we have a reasonably good health care system.” |
| 31 | Allessandro Ducanto (m) | 45‐50 | 14 | ICU senior clinician, centralized care hospital | “[…] We worked like this before in the team, we work with anesthesia nurses and one of our fears was the risk for the nurses. So we can protect ourselves but it is also clear to protect the nurse, too. Right? And the new protocol for intubation for example was developed together with the nurses.” |
| 32 | Sebastian Hansen (m) | 32 | >5 | Clinician internal medicine, | “We are developing a hygiene concept, we are developing a concept on how to deal with these kind of patients. And that took a lot of uncertainty out of it. And this structure took also, at least for me, away my fear.” |
| 33 | Sophie Schünemann (f) | 49 | 26 | ICU nurse and ward manager, maximum care hospital | “[…] there are certainly doctors who of course always said ‘Of course we will also go into this room protected and care for the patient’. But then there are also the doctors who sometimes said um ‘I’ll wait until the result of the test is there'.” |
| 34 | Mark Schröder (m) | 23 | 3 | ICU nurse, basic and regular care hospital | “And the donning and doffing every time before that, that was just always, [until you] got the certain handling out of it, how best to don, how best to doff then-, well, how best to doff hygienically. Then the hands. So, that was already a change.” |
| 35 | Christian Trüb (m) | 30 | 14 | ICU nurse, HEMS-TC, maximum care hospital | “So, because in the circle of my acquaintances, or friends, almost no one adhered to this contact ban. And that’s what I did. And when it was mentioned, there tends to be discussion. And, yes, I think everyone who doesn’t work in the medical field, who doesn’t work in nursing and doesn’t have anything to do with it directly, doesn’t take it seriously, at least that’s my feeling. Because it’s just a flu virus, like that […]” |
| 36 | Markus Feger (m) | 33 | 7 | ICU clinician, maximum care hospital | “[…] we are still waiting for the wave, so to speak. We hope, of course, that it won’t come.” |
| 37 | Doris Landau (f) | 27 | 8 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “And now, of course, they [clinic management] want you to step up and leave everything on the side and just come rumbling into the clinic. And from that, I’m like: no, honestly.” |
| 38 | Silvia Sorge (f) | 49 | 30 | ICU nurse, maximum care hospital | “That means, of course, if we have in the back of our minds, if the COVID-19 situation escalates, we will actually be at the end, yes. That’s what also depressed us a bit in this situation […]” |
| 39 | Melanie Munz (f) | 30 | 8 | Nurse and medical student, | “[…] I started to work, I just started to sweat super fast, that’s just very uncomfortable to work in these clothes and um also very strenuous. I meanwhile drink up to four, five liters of water on the ward, um change my clothes three times per shift, depending on how strenuous it was and how much we had to do, um but just um one hour in these isolation clothes is enough that you are sweating down to (laughs) your underpants. […] so this, this kind of working, this, this silence [in the patient room] and that you are actually not really tied to the outside […]” |
Figure 1.Processes around ambivalence and its embedding in the social practice and interaction of ICU HCPs at the beginning of COVID-19.