Resilience of frontline nurses during COVID pandemic in China: A qualitative study.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalNursing & health sciences
Year 2021
The aim of this study was to describe the resilience of nurses who cared for patients with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis, as well as factors that potentially contributed to that resilience. A total of 23 frontline nurses who cared for patients with COVID-19 were recruited from a COVID-19-designated facility in Shanghai, China, using purposive sampling strategies. In-depth interviews were conducted from March to May 2020. Qualitative data were transcribed verbatim and content analysis was used. Nurses exhibited psychological resilience while caring for patients with COVID-19. They displayed an ability to bounce back from negative mental experiences and transform to a positive mindset to cope with the stress they faced. Factors that enhanced their resilience during the pandemic were: becoming familiar with infectious disease protocols, having a sense of professional achievement, social support, having trust in the infection-control response team in the hospital, and self-regulation. This study could guide the design of future resilience-enhancing interventions that provide positive coping strategies for nurses caring for individuals with infectious diseases during a pandemic.
Epistemonikos ID: 70844f53edb1060fd85c04ae37810ffca2de2d62
First added on: Jun 11, 2021