Aim: To describe the experiences of Italian nurses who have been urgently and compulsorily allocated to a newly established COVID-19 sub-intensive care unit. Background: In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, no studies have documented the experience of nurses urgently reallocated to a newly created unit. Method: A qualitative descriptive study. Twenty-four nurses working in a subintensive care unit created for COVID-19 patients participated in four focus groups. Audio-recorded interviews were verbatim-transcribed; then, a thematic analysis was performed. Results: The experience of nurses was summarized along three lines: (a) ‘becoming a frontline nurse’, (b) ‘living a double-faced professional experience’ and (c) ‘advancing in nursing practice’. Conclusions: Nurses who experienced being mandatorily recruited and urgently reallocated to a COVID-19 unit lived through a mix of negative feelings in the early stages, a double-faced situation during the episode and, at the end, the perception of global growth as a person, as a team and as a professional. Implication for nursing management: Nurse managers could play a key role in identifying and preparing nurses in advance to mitigate their concerns and their sense of unpreparedness. The value attributed to nursing care should be promoted both during and after the current COVID-19 pandemic

Nurses' experiences of being recruited and transferred to a new sub-intensive care unit devoted to COVID-19 patients

Palese, Alvisa
2021-01-01

Abstract

Aim: To describe the experiences of Italian nurses who have been urgently and compulsorily allocated to a newly established COVID-19 sub-intensive care unit. Background: In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, no studies have documented the experience of nurses urgently reallocated to a newly created unit. Method: A qualitative descriptive study. Twenty-four nurses working in a subintensive care unit created for COVID-19 patients participated in four focus groups. Audio-recorded interviews were verbatim-transcribed; then, a thematic analysis was performed. Results: The experience of nurses was summarized along three lines: (a) ‘becoming a frontline nurse’, (b) ‘living a double-faced professional experience’ and (c) ‘advancing in nursing practice’. Conclusions: Nurses who experienced being mandatorily recruited and urgently reallocated to a COVID-19 unit lived through a mix of negative feelings in the early stages, a double-faced situation during the episode and, at the end, the perception of global growth as a person, as a team and as a professional. Implication for nursing management: Nurse managers could play a key role in identifying and preparing nurses in advance to mitigate their concerns and their sense of unpreparedness. The value attributed to nursing care should be promoted both during and after the current COVID-19 pandemic
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1197473
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