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Analysis of the Psychosocial Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Nursing Staff of the Intensive Care Units (ICU) in Spain

Authors

Munoz-Munoz, Maria , CARRETERO BRAVO, JESÚS ANGEL, Perez-Munoz, Celia , Diaz-Rodriguez, Mercedes

External publication

Si

Means

Healthcare (Basel)

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.8

SJR Impact

0.55

Publication date

01/05/2022

ISI

000803663900001

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-85129658142

Abstract

(1) The public health emergency, caused by COVID-19, has resulted in strong physical and mental exhaustion in healthcare workers. This research has been designed with the aim to describe the psychosocial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on nurses working in intensive care units (ICU) and identify the related risk factors. (2) This is a cross-sectional study, in which a self-administered questionnaire was designed to cover the dimensions of interest associated with psychosocial factors during the pandemic and their factor risks. (3) A total of 456 nursing professionals participated, and 88.4% were women. Most of the professionals had a temporary contract (71.3%) and person at risk close to them (88.8%). Regarding psychosocial factors, there was a worsening in most of the associated variables, especially in sleep problems, anxiety, stress, and job performance. Female nurses were more prone to anxiety. Those under 30, as well as those with temporary contracts, were more unfocused. Professionals with a person at risk in their environment felt much more worried. The degree of exposure was associated with greater fear. (4) Those nurses who were female, younger, and with a temporary employment contract were shown to be more vulnerable to the impact of the pandemic on their psychosocial health. Because of this, it is necessary to adopt effective strategies for the protection of nurses' health, focusing on the specific risk factors identified.

Keywords

COVID-19; pandemic; coronavirus; ICU; nurses; psychosocial impact

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