Jacqueline Christianson1, Jill Guttormson1, Natalie Susan McAndrew2,3, Kelly Calkins1. 1. College of Nursing, Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI, USA. 2. College of Nursing, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA. 3. Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin Froedtert Hospital, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
Abstract
Background: Nurse duty of care, the balance between nursing occupational obligations to provide care, the personal costs for providing such care, and the reward for providing care, has been significantly altered by the COVID-19 pandemic. ICU nurses are increasingly burdened with higher personal costs to fulfill their jobs, but little additional reward for continuing to provide care. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the duty of care balance among ICU nurses who manage COVID-19 patients. Design: This was a descriptive qualitative study using semi-structured interviews. Methods: Nurses were recruited for a parent study on ICU nursing during COVID-19; this is a secondary analysis of the interviews that took place during the parent study. Content analysis was utilized to identify themes from interview transcripts. Results: Thirteen nurses participated in interviews. Nurses reported betrayal at perceived breeches in their duty of care agreement by their employers, the general public, and national health authorities. They described alterations to previous standards of care such as significantly increased workloads, worsening understaffing, and changes to patient care expectations that were implemented for reasons other than betterment of patient care. Nurses reported they felt a moral obligation to provide care, however they experienced disempowerment and burnout that affected them both in and out of the workplace. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected several aspects of the duty of care balance, resulting in a duty of care balance that is inequitable to nurses. Imbalance in the effort, risks, and rewards for nursing professionals may contribute to nurse burnout. Relevance to Clinical Practice: This research highlights the need for healthcare administrators to consider resource allocation, nurse appreciation, and commensurate compensation for professional nurses.
Background: Nurse duty of care, the balance between nursing occupational obligations to provide care, the personal costs for providing such care, and the reward for providing care, has been significantly altered by the COVID-19 pandemic. ICU nurses are increasingly burdened with higher personal costs to fulfill their jobs, but little additional reward for continuing to provide care. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the duty of care balance among ICU nurses who manage COVID-19 patients. Design: This was a descriptive qualitative study using semi-structured interviews. Methods: Nurses were recruited for a parent study on ICU nursing during COVID-19; this is a secondary analysis of the interviews that took place during the parent study. Content analysis was utilized to identify themes from interview transcripts. Results: Thirteen nurses participated in interviews. Nurses reported betrayal at perceived breeches in their duty of care agreement by their employers, the general public, and national health authorities. They described alterations to previous standards of care such as significantly increased workloads, worsening understaffing, and changes to patient care expectations that were implemented for reasons other than betterment of patient care. Nurses reported they felt a moral obligation to provide care, however they experienced disempowerment and burnout that affected them both in and out of the workplace. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected several aspects of the duty of care balance, resulting in a duty of care balance that is inequitable to nurses. Imbalance in the effort, risks, and rewards for nursing professionals may contribute to nurse burnout. Relevance to Clinical Practice: This research highlights the need for healthcare administrators to consider resource allocation, nurse appreciation, and commensurate compensation for professional nurses.
The COVID-19 pandemic caused a significant shift in the occupational stressors and
risks associated with critical care nursing. Frontline healthcare workers and their
household members were found to be significantly more likely to suffer from severe
COVID-19 than nonessential workers (Mutambudzi et al., 2021; Shah et al., 2020). Nurses
had a diminished ability to mitigate occupational risks due to shortages of personal
protective equipment (PPE) (Cohen & van der Meulen Rogers, 2020). Many nurses felt there was
little support or managerial response for the increased risk and stress posed by
their work environment (Foli et
al., 2021). Consequently, nurses caring for COVID-19 patients experience
increased psychological distress, fear, and greater intention to leave their jobs
(Labrague & de los
Santos, 2020). Burnout, a syndrome of exhaustion, depersonalization, and
diminished sense of personal accomplishment (Maslach & Jackson, 1981), is a
pervasive problem in nursing which has worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic (Labrague & de los Santos,
2020; Kumar et al.,
2021). Burnout is linked to long shift durations, high workloads, and
high levels of stress (Borhani
et al., 2014; Dall’Ora et al., 2015). Nurse burnout is associated with increased
intention to leave the profession and increased patient mortality (Aiken et al., 2002).Nurses have a professional and legal obligation to provide care for patients (American Nurses Association,
2015; Tingle,
2009). Duty of care is the concept that individuals who provide
healthcare are obligated to prioritize the needs of the people for whom they are
caring (Sokol, 2006;
Terry et al., 2017).
While there is not consensus on a definition, most scholars agree that duty of care
represents a negotiation between society and healthcare workers (Cox, 2020; Tomlinson, 2008). In the
context of professional nursing, duty of care is a balance in which the
professional's effort and personal risks are compensated with a reward structure.
The nurse's obligations with regards to duty of care are not limitless; duty of care
is situational. For example, nurses are not typically expected to put themselves in
harm's way for their patients (American Nurses Association, 2015). Changes in the work environment and
the effort–risk–reward balance therefore alter the nurse's duty of care. Ambiguity
around the limitations of a nurse's duty of care can lead to a disconnect in mutual
expectations between nurses and the patients for whom they are charged to care,
particularly in the setting of changes in the work environment (Reid, 2005). The COVID-19
pandemic caused a sudden alteration in the risk profile of critical care nursing;
consequently, the balance between duty of care and nurse recompense has been
disrupted. The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated staffing shortages, escalated
patient acuity levels, and decreased access to reprieves from work which also places
nurses working with COVID-19 patients at increased risk for burnout (Aiken et al., 2002; Goldman et al., 2018;
Kumar et al.,
2021).
Review of Literature
Altruism, the act of behaving for the benefit of others, is commonly cited as a
driving force that impels nurses toward their work (Van der Wath & van Wyk, 2019). Prior
research has found that altruism had a strong impact upon job satisfaction, and
further hypothesized that nurses will tolerate a work environment with low pay or
high stress because the work fulfills the nurse's sense of altruism (Dotson et al., 2014).
Altruistic ideals are associated with higher levels of personal accomplishment, but
also exhaustion, indicating that altruism can be a protective factor (promote
personal accomplishment) but also risk factor (increasing exhaustion) in the
development of burnout (Altun,
2002). Reduced altruism is associated with higher levels of burnout in
nurses, however the directionality of this relationship is unclear (Burks et al., 2012). If
altruism is indeed one of the benefits of nursing work, reduced ability to behave
altruistically can be understood as a functional reduction in compensation, further
upsetting the effort–reward balance inherent in a duty of care arrangement.Perceived moral obligation and altruistic behavior can fuel the duty of care
imbalance. For example, poor access to lunch breaks or agreeing to overtime shifts
could be understood as a nurse's attempt to fill a patient care need over their own
needs. A professional obligation toward patient care above all else makes nurses
particularly vulnerable to burnout because it places pressure upon nurses to accept
situations in which the duty of care balance is unfavorable. While the American
Nursing Association Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements (2015)
provision 5 states, “The nurse owes the same duties to self as to others, to promote
health and safety, preserve wholeness of character and integrity…” (p. 19), nurses
may be confronted with the impossible task of caring for themselves while caring for
others.The workplace and social challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic have had a broad
impact upon the nursing profession and have disturbed the balance between
professional effort, risk, and reward. The effect of this environmental change upon
ICU nurses’ perspectives on duty of care has not been studied, however understanding
changes in the duty of care balance is essential because duty of care is a central
commitment between professional nurses and the public. The purpose of this study was
to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the duty of care balance among ICU
nurses who manage COVID-19 patients.
Methods
Study Design, Inclusion Criteria, and Sample
This paper is a secondary analysis of semi-structured interview data obtained
from a parent study on ICU nurses who worked with COVID patients during the
pandemic. The parent study recruited a national sample (N = 488) of nurses who
participated in an online survey; all survey participants were given the
opportunity to self-select to participate in one-on-one interviews to discuss
their experiences working in an ICU caring for COVID-19 patients. Thirteen
participants completed the interview focused on overall experience of COVID as
part of the primary study; this secondary analysis utilized those interview
transcripts as the data source. Overall experiences reported from these
interviews will be reported elsewhere (manuscript under review). The objective
of the initial survey was to describe the experiences of ICU nurses in terms of
the impact of the pandemic upon their personal and professional well-being, how
they were changed by the challenges of providing ICU care to COVID-19 patients
and their families, their observations of ICU patient care for COVID-19
patients, and their beliefs on how the lessons learned from caring for COVID-19
patients might inform ICU care in the future. This secondary analysis of the
interviews from the parent study is focused upon the concept of duty of care
balance in the COVID ICU setting. American Association of Critical-Care Nurses
(AACN) members were recruited through the AACN weekly e-newsletter. The study
was also advertised on Facebook and researchers shared the survey link with
colleagues and on social media (Twitter). This study protocol was reviewed and
approved by the Marquette University institutional review board.
Interview Structure
One-on-one interviews took place from November 2020 through January 2021 and were
audio recorded over virtual audio or video conferencing platforms based upon
participant preference. The interviews were performed by two critical care nurse
researchers (KC and NM) and were transcribed verbatim by a professional
transcriptionist. All interviews consisted of a one-time, one-on-one virtual
video conferencing meeting between the interviewer and participant. The
interview was semi-structured based around a guide consisted of one primary
guiding question: Can you tell me about what it has been like to work in the ICU
during the COVID-19 pandemic? Additional probing questions included questions
such as: What was the hardest part of the experience for you? What do you want
people to know about your experience? In what way has this experience affected
your personal/professional well-being? Field notes were not included in this
study. Interviews took approximately 30–60 min to complete.
Analysis
Interview transcripts were analyzed with content analysis. Content analysis
consists of a process in which interview data is analyzed and coded for meaning
and is then abstracted to better understand broad overarching themes contained
within the data (Erlingsson
& Brysiewicz, 2017; Hsieh & Shannon, 2005; Ravitch & Carl,
2021). Two investigators (JC and JG) independently read the original
transcripts to get a sense of the data and identify meaningful text related to
duty of care, professional roles, and the healthcare system. Coding was
performed by hand without automation or software assistance. The concept of duty
of care is poorly defined within nursing literature, so a pre-defined
theoretical framework was not utilized to guide this study.Both investigators met as a team to discuss and come to a consensus upon
preliminary coding. Each author then went back to the data to validate themes
and subthemes as well as supportive exemplar quotations. Results were reviewed
and discussed until consensus was reached that themes were representative of
participant responses in the data set (internal validity and credibility).
Transferability was enhanced with description of sample characteristics and
selecting quotes that best represented the overall themes (Elo & Kyngäs, 2008). Credibility
was enhanced via review of codes, quotations, and results from two additional
authors familiar with the data set (KC & NM).
Results
Sample Characteristics
Thirteen nurses participated in interviews, resulting in data saturation.
Participants were primarily staff nurses (76.9%) and female (92.3%) (Table 1). Thirty
eight percent had less than 5 years of ICU experience.
Table 1.
Workplace and Participant Characteristics (N = 13).
Characteristic
N (%)
Nursing position
Staff Nurse
10 (76.9)
Nurse Manager/Supervisor
3 (23.1)
Age years
20–30
3 (23.1)
31–40
4 (30.7)
41–50
2 (15.4)
51–60
2 (15.4)
>61
2 (15.4)
Gender
Female
12 (92.3)
Male
1 (7.7)
Years of ICU experience
0–5
5 (38.4)
6–10
1 (7.7)
11–15
3 (23.1)
16–25
1(7.7)
26 +
3 (23.1)
CCRN certification
Yes
9 (69.2)
Workplace and Participant Characteristics (N = 13).Four overarching themes emerged from this analysis: (1) perceptions of betrayal
or abandonment of nurses, (2) deviations from the normalized standard of care
expectations, (3) feeling a moral obligation to care for COVID-19 patients, and
(4) the expectation of self-sacrifice contributing to the experience of
burnout.
Theme 1: Perceptions of Betrayal or Abandonment of Nurses
Participants reported distress at changes to the work environment that resulted
in increased workloads, decreased ability to provide care, and increased
personal risk associated with their work. Nurses frequently described that they
were expected to be self-sacrificing—to put themselves in harm's way to care for
patients with a highly infectious disease. One expressed frustration at being
called a hero by her employer: “I think if you call people heroes, then it's
okay to push them off the cliff” (Participant # 2). Several participants cited
evolving or selective PPE recommendations due to PPE shortages; they felt the
risks associated with COVID-19 were unfairly placed primarily upon nurses. “You
can't say you don't need to wear it because PPE is running out. That's not fair.
We’re not stupid” (Participant #1).Nurses had perceived a lack of safety for both their patients and themselves.
Several participants expressed distress at their perceived expendability.I feel like the systems that were put in place to protect us failed us.
(Participant #2)Administratively, no one cares we’re expendable we’re just like soldiers.
(Participant #6)Nurses reported that they felt like disposable assets and that their personal
sacrifices to do their work despite such conditions were not valued.The military accepts responsibility for the harm that they’ve caused but
hospitals aren't accepting responsibility and they’re denying
accountability and they are changing the rules as we go and this risk
was imposed upon me. I didn't sign a contract. I wasn't asked if I was
willing to risk my life. It was just given to me, take it or leave it.
(Participant 6).Increased workloads and noted resources that were present during the early stages
of the pandemic disappeared even though additional help was still needed to
manage the workloads. Some nurses described minimization of ancillary staff like
housekeepers and dietary staff, resulting in nurses being required to do work
like mopping the floors in addition to their nursing duties. Nurses noted
differences in how direct care and non-direct care staff were treated by
hospital administration. They perceived a two-tiered system, in which the safety
and needs of direct care staff were minimized while non-direct care staff
enjoyed benefits like paid furlough:We quickly realized that other parts of the hospital were being given
furlough, like days off with pay, because they didn't have the same
operations were going on. We were the ones that were working the
hardest, but then other places were getting off-work [with] pay. And it
just didn't seem to make sense. We were working overtime and working
twice as hard, and there were other people that could have come in and
done some of the work. (Participant #11)Nurses felt like they were expendable or unvalued.That's been kind of the overarching feeling is that, I am just a very
easily replaceable clog in the machine. And yeah, that just my skills
and my life, and same with my coworkers and other healthcare workers,
just are not considered valuable. (Participant #13).Two participants felt their employers had abdicated themselves of responsibility
for nurses who tested positive for COVID-19. Participant #6 discussed the steps
their healthcare organization required them to take to obtain a COVID-19 test,
and felt the process was designed to discourage nurses from finding out if they
were safe to provide care. A nurse shared that her employer assumed that all
nurses who tested positive for COVID-19 after managing COVID-19 patients became
infected in the community, “…Because you can't prove that you got it in the
hospital” (Participant #13).Additionally, many nurse respondents felt abandoned by the healthcare
organizations they worked for, and by trusted government authorities like the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Occupational Safety and
Health Association. National health authorities and government institutions were
perceived to be deceiving the public about who was becoming ill through
selective reporting:When I first got out there, the government was saying it was all the
elderly people with comorbidities that were dying.. My first day in the
ICU and I walked in, and the patients were 35, 46, 54. They were all
young, they were all young. (Participant #4)Nurses expressed a sense of betrayal or abandonment by the general public. They
cited COVID-19 denial as one source of betrayal and expressed frustration around
noncompliance with public health guidelines. In the context of public
noncompliance with public health recommendations, participants expressed
cynicism with being called a hero by the general public.
Theme 2: Deviations From the Normalized Standard of Care Expectations
Nurses experienced changes to their professional roles that negatively affected
their ability to care for patients. Participants experienced an increased
workload during the pandemic. Higher than normal patient acuities, deaths far
exceeding unit norms, lack of ancillary staff, short or understaffing,
particularly for patient acuity, were frequently mentioned as causes of the
increased workload.A lot of the hospitals I worked at, they significantly reduced their
staff. So we didn't have any nurse aid a lot of times, the respiratory
therapists weren't there. And so we were doing more work with fewer of
us. (Participant #13)Participants reported inability to provide care to the previously expected
standard because of the increased workload.We are expected to do the same amount of charting, the same detail of
charting on these patients, and they are some of the sickest patients
I’ve ever taken care of. (Participant #3)Changes were made to their work to accommodate a new normal. Participants stated
that previously unacceptable vital signs or lab values, such as hypoxia or blood
gas values, were now seen as “pretty good.” Excessive deaths, far beyond what
was previously considered normal, was described as commonplace for some
participants. Participants experienced rapid practice changes that were not
necessarily in alignment with evidence or best care recommendations. Some
participants noted that practice changes were related to infection control, such
as clustering cares to reduce staff exposure to COVID patients and reuse of
single-use PPE due to shortages. The changes experienced were frequent, “It
seemed to change week by week, day by day, especially at the beginning”
(Participant #13). COVID patient management was described as “trial and error,”
(Participant #4). One participant summed up the experience:I talked about those impossible standards and they’re impossible just
within your nursing scope, and when you’re asked to do things outside of
that.. These patients are on 12 drips, easy, or eight, whatever. But
just managing the drips alone and the vitals, blood pressures, and the
almost consistent fevers and getting blood cultures every other day,
just all those things. (Participant #5)Numerous other changes to practice and the environment were reported related to
the high acuity, lack of resources, and infection control: A participant
described the experience of doing CPR on a prone patient who they kept prone
during the resuscitation effort. Physical changes to the practice environment
were reported, such as extension tubing on IV pumps to allow the pumps to be
used without going into the patient rooms. Nurses described the process of
creating beds for ICU patients in abnormal places, such as opening pediatric
wards for adult ICU patients or opening previously closed areas of the hospital
to accept ICU overflow admissions. Nurses expressed distress at the forced
separation between patients and their families and the challenges of using video
conferencing software as an alternative to patient visitation.
Theme 3: Feeling a Moral Obligation to Care for COVID-19 Patients
Nurses experienced a sense of moral obligation toward, as well as a sense of
pride in being able to, care for patients during the pandemic. Participants
stated they felt a sense of moral or professional obligation to be a nurse
during the pandemic, “someone had to do it” (Participants #5, 6).And then I resolved that I had to be on the front line that I couldn't
neglect someone that every day that I was capable, I was going to go in
and fight the fight. (Participant #6)I just wanted to go in, I wanted to help. (Participant #9)If there were things like this going to happen, that I was going to make sure
that I’d be a part of it. (Participant #7)I feel like this is something that not only am I capable of doing but also
somewhat of a moral obligation. (Participant #5)
Theme 4: The Expectation of Self-Sacrifice Contributing to the Experience of
Burnout
Nurses expressed feelings of numbness, isolation, and diminished personal
accomplishment both within and outside the workplace. Nurses expressed that the
stress and challenges of their work had a significant effect on their personal
and professional lives. Several participants found themselves questioning if
they were doing enough for their patients. “So it's like whether I gave enough
or not enough or I know enough or don't know enough, am I doing what's right by
this patient?” (Participant #5). Nurses reported feeling helpless or
disempowered that they could not do more for their patients, and consequent
exhaustion was a prevalent theme. Participants expressed a sense of
hopelessness; one participant remarked, “We’re not seeing a light at the end of
the tunnel.” Nurses reported the uncharacteristically high death toll in the
ICUs contributed to their sense of hopelessness (loss of personal
accomplishment) and disconnection from their patients (depersonalization).I would want people to know that we’re doing everything we can and then
some. It's just not effective (Participant #11).Everyone's dying. It's hard to explain. I mean, patients have always passed
away, but it seems like now once they’re intubated, they really don't leave
our ICU (Participant #10).Nurses experienced distress at being powerless to help their patients. “You get
sort of numb after awhile. You come back to work and the patient that you had
taken care of died, but there's another one that is having exactly the same
situation in that same room. It's over and over again.” (Participant #2).Increased irritability and decreased tolerance for other people as a result of
their work-related stress was experienced by participants.So on my days off, and when I would come home, I was finding, I was less
patient with my husband, my kids and other outside life situations
(Participant #8).Nurses reported challenges functioning as normal during their non-working hours.I found myself being very burdened and just worn out (Participant
#5).A lot of times it's like I don't want to get out of bed. I’ll read, I’ll
listen to radio, I’ll listen to some music, and then I’ll fall asleep again
(Participant #2).
Discussion
COVID-19 has changed the landscape of critical care nursing in the United States.
This secondary analysis found four prominent themes that indicated changes to the
duty of care balance: (1) perceptions of betrayal or abandonment of nurses, (2)
deviations from the normalized standard of care expectations, (3) feeling a moral
obligation to care for COVID-19 patients, and (4) the expectation of self-sacrifice
contributing to the experience of burnout.
Duty of Care
Duty of care, professional and moral obligation to provide care for patients in
the context of an effort–reward structure, is linked to several of the themes
found in this study. Nurses described a sense of betrayal or abandonment by
groups they previously placed trust in, such as their employers, federal
healthcare authorities, and the public. Betrayal inherently implies a
pre-existing expectation for behavior; nurses expected they would be protected
and supported in a pandemic but felt betrayed when their expectations were not
met by federal health authorities, the general public, or their employers. The
disconnect between the nurse's pre-existing belief that they would be protected
or supported in the workplace and the reality of how nurses were treated in the
workplace caused a disruption in the duty of care balance. In short, nurses
perceive betrayal because they believed the social contract between themselves
as professionals and the entities they worked within had been breached. In our
study, some nurses expressed betrayal about specific issues such as PPE
guidelines changing when there were resource shortages. Others expressed
betrayal around the behavior of the public with regards to noncompliance with
public health recommendations, as well as lack of accurate or consistent
guidance from health authorities.Nurses in this study expressed symptoms of burnout but simultaneously expressed
feelings of obligation towards their work and their patients. Personal feelings
of obligation towards one's work can prompt conflict in the presence of
increased workloads and perceived betrayal by employers, customers, or governing
bodies (Bennett et al.,
2020; Foli et
al., 2021). Burnout is a syndrome of exhaustion, depersonalization,
and decreased personal accomplishment (Maslach & Jackson, 1981).
Perceived betrayal and altered perceptions of duty of care increase the risk of
burnout by creating a conflict between professional obligation and a hostile
workplace that makes it increasingly difficult to fulfil obligations toward
work. Burnout is a logical but underrecognized outcome for professionals who
feel obligated to remain in a job in which they feel overburdened,
undercompensated, and unappreciated for their work (Janzen & Phelan, 2015).
Altruism, Burnout, and Self-Care
Altruism is a commonly held ideal in professional nursing, however nurses in this
study experienced barriers to altruism while caring for COVID-19 patients.
Numerous participants reported they felt detached from their patients
(depersonalization) such that it was difficult to form empathetic connections
with them. Maslach and
Jackson (1981) defined burnout as a syndrome of depersonalization,
exhaustion, and diminished personal accomplishment. Several participants
expressed concerns that they could not do enough for their patients, and others
expressed a vicarious sense of betrayal on behalf of their patients who they
felt may be suffering due to the actions of others. Numerous nurses described a
repetitive cycle in which patients gradually worsened and died, and were quickly
replaced by another patient who would inevitably go through the same cycle
regardless of nursing or medical interventions. Nurses expressed
depersonalization and distress at the seeming inevitability of the cycle of
illness, deterioration, and death.Participants described changes to the nursing landscape due to resource rather
than patient needs. Averse conditions, such as those that nurses have reported
during COVID-19, make altruism and “going above and beyond” impossible to
accomplish. While altruism is not a tangible reward, inability to perform
altruistic acts nonetheless decreases the reward that nurses receive from their
work (Burks et al.,
2012; Dotson et
al., 2014). Reduced ability to behave altruistically therefore
disrupts the effort–risk–reward balance inherent in the duty of care balance. In
our study, nurses were expected to perform their work under immensely stressful
circumstances without access to resources like adequate staffing, and despite
their sacrifices it made little difference in their patient outcomes.While participants discussed their challenges, several also discussed the sense
of professional pride they had for being able to work as nurses during a
pandemic. Several nurses expressed a moral obligation and personal pride that
they could care for COVID patients under such adverse conditions. This finding
of professional obligation and self-esteem in being able to “answer the call”
was consistent with prior studies on COVID nursing (Bennett et al., 2020; Foli et al., 2021;
Missouridou et al.,
2021).
Balancing Professional Effort and Rewards
Empathy and altruism are rewards nurses derive through their work, however, the
lack of personal accomplishment articulated by many of the interviewed nurses
raises an important question: If altruism is indeed one of the rewards for
professional nursing, how does the workforce cope when the ability to behave
altruistically is diminished? Is fulfillment of altruistic ideals part of nurse
self-care, and should nurse well-being be dependent upon altruistic fulfillment
in the workplace? These questions are particularly relevant during the COVID-19
pandemic, but also apply to pre-COVID nursing (Van der Wath & van Wyk, 2019).
Chronic understaffing diminishes the amount of time a nurse can spend with their
patient developing an empathetic bond or working to better the patient's
condition (Dotson et al.,
2014). Decreased reward and increased effort both alter the balance
in the duty of care equation against nurses, fueling burnout.COVID-19 has placed immense stress upon ICU nurses and exacerbated pre-existing
mechanisms through which burnout is perpetuated. Nurse burnout and possible
consequent attrition from the profession threatens the nursing workforce and
jeopardizes high-quality patient care. However, nurse burnout cannot be fully
addressed without consideration of the effort–risk–reward balance inherent in a
professional work environment, nor can it be fully addressed without addressing
the role of altruistic ideals within the profession. While altruism is a worthy
ideal, the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated that the duty of care balance
should not hinge upon a nurse's willingness to accept a suboptimal work
environment because of the reward that altruistic acts can provide. Nurses in
this study expressed an ethical compulsion to work with COVID-19 patients, which
resulted in self-sacrifice as they continued to work under hazardous conditions
without proportionate recompense.This research supports the notion that retaining a strong nursing workforce
cannot rely upon altruistic ideals as a reward for professional work; for both
nurses and patients to thrive, nurses must be given adequate resources to
perform their duties and compensated fairly for the challenges they face in the
workplace. Further research is needed to address how the duty of care balance
can be righted without reliance upon an intangible reward like fulfillment of
altruistic ideals which may or may not be realistically possible in the
workplace.
Limitations
There are several limitations to this study. The study sample was small,
consisting of 13 interviews, which may not be fully representative of nurses
working in COVID ICUs. This manuscript is a secondary analysis of interview data
from a larger study of ICU nurses, which may have limited the data collected on
the topics of burnout, duty of care, and ethical obligations to patient care.
While JC and JG believed they had reached data saturation with regards to duty
of care, evidenced by several consecutive transcripts with no new emerging
themes, it is possible that data saturation was not met because the parent study
was not focused explicitly upon duty of care. Data saturation was documented for
the primary analysis of this data set however; information gathered may have
been different if duty of care was the primary topic of inquiry for the parent
study. Finally, the themes and connections drawn from the interviews were not
verified by the participants themselves for confirmation of accuracy.
Implications for Practice
The COVID-19 pandemic has strained ICU nurses to their limits by increasing their
work-related obligations, decreasing available resources to facilitate their
work, placing them at personal risk related to their work, and diminishing the
rewards they receive for continuing to perform their work. COVID ICU nurses
experienced symptoms of burnout including depersonalization, decreased sense of
personal achievement, and exhaustion due to their work during the pandemic.
Burnout in turn results in increased patient morbidity and mortality, escalating
nurse turnover, and career attrition from the nursing profession (Aiken et al., 2002;
Borhani et al.,
2014; Dotson et
al., 2014). It is of urgent importance for healthcare administrators
to provide an equitable workplace in which nurses have access to adequate
resources in the workplace, are appreciated, and are appropriately financially
compensated for their essential work.
Conclusion
In the professional environment, duty of care is a balance in which the
professional's effort and personal risks are compensated with a reward structure.
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted all three aspects of duty of care balance
unfavorably for ICU nurses. This study adds to the previous body of knowledge by
describing nurse burnout in the setting of perceptions of alterations in duty of
care including increased roles and responsibilities, decreased reward for their
work, and increased risk associated with their work. Our study highlights that the
duty of care balance has been altered by suboptimal working conditions and perceived
betrayal thereby fueling nurse burnout. Further research exploring the duty of care
among ICU nurses is needed. Curation of a culture of respect, appreciation, adequate
resource allocation, and appropriate financial compensation for nurses is of
critical and urgent importance in re-balancing nursing professional duty of care to
address the burnout experienced during the pandemic.