학술논문

Perceived risk of infection, ethical challenges and motivational factors among frontline nurses in Covid-19 pandemic: prerequisites and lessons for future pandemic.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Nursing. 1/2/2024, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-10. 10p.
Subject
*RISK assessment
*CROSS-sectional method
*FEAR
*WORK
*PATIENTS' families
*CROSS infection
*PROFESSIONAL ethics
*MEDICAL personnel
*MULTIPLE regression analysis
*HOSPITAL care
*TERTIARY care
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*PATIENT care
*MOTIVATION (Psychology)
*SURVEYS
*EXPERIENCE
*PROFESSIONS
*NURSES' attitudes
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH methodology
*INFERENTIAL statistics
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*LENGTH of stay in hospitals
*COMMITMENT (Psychology)
*COVID-19 pandemic
*EMERGENCY management
*EXPERIENTIAL learning
Language
ISSN
1472-6955
Abstract
Background: Infection risk was significant for front-line nurses during the Covid-19 outbreak. The pandemic presented several ethical difficulties and sapped nurses' drive to labor harder for longer periods. This study evaluates registered nurses' perceptions of Covid-19 infection risk, ethical dilemmas, and motivating factors. Materials and methods: During March and April 2022, 400 registered nurses from a newly established tertiary care hospital participated in this cross-sectional exploratory survey. The risk assessment scale, motivation to work scale, and ethical dilemma scale were used to assess the perceived risk of infection, motivational factors and ethical challenges experienced by the nurses. Appropriate descriptive and inferential statistics were applied to compute the results. Results: 76.4% of nurses feared working as a nurse put them at higher risk of infection. Besides the fear of contracting infection, nurses believed they were the source of infection to family members (70.8%) and people around (67.5%). 63.3% of nurses agree that they do not have the right to refuse treatment and every patient has the right to receive optimal care, regardless of age, gender, and medical conditions. Professional obligation to treat patients (72.3%) and sound professional knowledge and experience (83.5%) are important motivating factors to work during the pandemic. Multilinear regression analysis revealed that professional education (95% CI, 3.845 − 0.694, p = 0.005), Covid-19 positive status (95% CI,0.455-2.756, p = 0.006), and post-Covid-19 hospitalization (95% CI, 1.395–6.978, p = 0.003) and duration of hospitalization (95% CI, 0.754-0.058, p = 0.022) are independent predictors of higher perceived risk of infection among nurses. Conclusions: During the pandemic, nurses were afraid to work and faced personal and family risks of contracting the virus. Despite these challenges, they still feel a strong sense of commitment and dedication to providing the best possible care. Nurse administrators need to create a supportive environment that follows ethical principles and meets the needs of nurses to boost their motivation and encourage them to continue working for longer periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]