Nurses’ challenges, concerns and unfair requirements during the COVID-19 outbreak

BackgroundDuring disease outbreaks, nurses express concerns regarding the organizational and social support required to manage role conflicts.ObjectivesThe study examined concerns, threats, and attitudes relating to care provision during the COVID-19 outbreak among nurses in Israel.DesignA 53-item q...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sperling, Daniel (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Sage 2021
In: Nursing ethics
Year: 2021, Volume: 28, Issue: 7/8, Pages: 1096-1110
Further subjects:B Clinical dilemmas
B rights at work
B duty of care
B Covid-19
B Risk
B Family
B Qualitative Research
B Work-life balance
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Summary:BackgroundDuring disease outbreaks, nurses express concerns regarding the organizational and social support required to manage role conflicts.ObjectivesThe study examined concerns, threats, and attitudes relating to care provision during the COVID-19 outbreak among nurses in Israel.DesignA 53-item questionnaire was designed for this research, including four open-ended questions. The article used a qualitative research to analyze the responses to the open-ended questions and their association with responses to the close-ended ones.Participants and research contextIn all, 231 registered nurses and fourth-year nursing students throughout the whole country. The questionnaire was delivered in nursing Facebook and WhatsApp groups and through snowball sampling.Ethical considerationsThe research was pre-approved by the Ethics Committee at the researchers’ university.ResultsNurses mostly referred to personal risk, followed by dilemmas regarding care provision. On average, 38.6% of quotations stated that during the pandemic, nurses are not asked to perform unfair duties. Nurses discussed activities and requirements that impact their personal and familial safety, their relationship with employer, organization or the state, and their duty to providing care. Other than fear of contraction, respondents’ most frequent themes of concerns were related to work condition and patients’ interests, inter-collegiate relationships, and uncertainty and worries about the future. Respondents’ ethical dilemmas mostly referred to clinical questions, providing care without adequate equipment or managerial support, and in conditions of uncertainty and increased risk.DiscussionNurses raise important issues concerning their relationships with employers and family members, and significant insights regarding the pandemic and their revised responsibilities and definition of work. They raise serious concerns regarding their rights at work and their standing for them.ConclusionsHealth managers should find ways to enhance the ethical climate and institutional support to enable a better work-life balance in times of pandemic and support nurses’ working needs and labor rights.
ISSN:1477-0989
Contains:Enthalten in: Nursing ethics
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1177/09697330211005175