Work-related stress: The impact of COVID-19 on critical care and redeployed nurses: A mixed methods study
Date
2021-07-05Author
Rattray, Janice
McCallum, Louise
Hull, Alastair
Ramsay, Pam
Salisbury, Lisa
Scott, Teresa
Cole, Stephen
Miller, Jordan
Dixon, Diane
Metadata
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Rattray, J., McCallum, L., Hull, A., Ramsay, P., Salisbury, L., Scott, T., Cole, S., Miller, J. & Dixon, D. (2021) Work-related stress: The impact of COVID-19 on critical care and redeployed nurses: A mixed methods study. BMJ Open, 11(7):e051326.
Abstract
Introduction: We need to understand the impact of COVID-19 on Critical Care (CCNs) and redeployed nurses and NHS organisations.
Methods and analysis: This is a mixed methods study (QUANT – QUAL), underpinned by a theoretical model of occupational stress, the Job-Demand Resources Model (JD-R). Participants are critical care and redeployed nurses from Scottish and three large English units.
Phase one is a cross-sectional survey in part replicating a pre-COVID-19 study and results will be compared with this data. Linear and logistic regression analysis will examine the relationship between antecedent, demographic, and professional variables on health impairment (burnout syndrome, mental health, posttraumatic stress symptoms), motivation (work engagement, commitment), and organisational outcomes (intention to remain in critical care nursing and quality of care). We will also assess the usefulness of a range of resources provided by the NHS and professional organisations.
To allow in-depth exploration of individual experiences, phase two will be one-to-one semi-structured interviews with 25 CCNs and 10 redeployed nurses. The JD-R model will provide the initial coding framework to which the interview data will be mapped. The remaining content will be analysed inductively to identify and chart content that is not captured by the model. In this way the adequacy of the JD-R model is examined robustly and its expression in this context will be detailed.
Ethics and dissemination: Ethics approval was granted from the University of Aberdeen CERB2020101993. We plan to disseminate findings at stakeholder events, publish in peer reviewed journals and at present at national and international conferences.