Nurses’ experiences and sense making of COVID-19 redeployment and the impact on well-being, performance, and turnover intentions: A longitudinal multimethod study.

IF 3.1 Q1 NURSING
Alice Dunning , Hannah Hartley , Kerrie Unsworth , Ruth Simms-Ellis , Michael Dunn , Angela Grange , Jenni Murray , Jayne Marran , Rebecca Lawton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

During Covid-19 nurses were redeployed to new teams and specialties at a level never previously experienced. Little is known about how nurses made sense of and coped with this situation and what we can learn from this for future redeployment approaches.

Objectives

We sought to understand how nurses made sense of ongoing redeployment during the COVID-19 pandemic and how this related to their psychological distress, burnout, turnover intentions, and perceived performance

Design

A longitudinal multi-method design. (ISRCTN: 18,172,749).

Setting(s)

Three acute National Health Service (NHS) Trusts in England, selected for diversity in geographical location and ethnicity, with different COVID-19 contexts.

Participants

Sixty-two nurses (90 % female; 83 % white) who experienced different types of redeployment during the pandemic, with an average of 17 year's post-registration experience (mean age 41 years).

Methods

We gathered both interview and survey data from 62 nurses across two or three time points in 2020–2021 and sought to find commonalities and differences in patterns of experience using Pen Portrait analysis.

Results

The pandemic redeployment process was life-changing for all nurses, personally and professionally. The research uncovered an intertwined pattern of identity and sensemaking as nurses coped with COVID-19 redeployment. Three sensemaking ‘journeys’ were evident, involving professional identity as a nurse and identification with one's organisation. Nurses in journey one: ‘Organisational Identification and Professional Identity Maintained’ (n = 28) had the best outcomes for wellbeing, burnout, performance, and retention. Those experiencing the ‘Devaluation of Organisational Identification But Maintenance of Professional Identity’ journey (n = 24) maintained their professional identity, but their organisational identification deteriorated. Journey three nurses: ‘Devaluation of both Organisational Identification and Professional Identity’ (n = 10) had the worst outcomes for wellbeing, burnout, performance, and retention. A salient nurse identity triggered stoicism and resilient behaviours while external cues of control, support and contextual awareness affected organisational identification.

Conclusions

Nurses made sense of their experiences of redeployment during Covid-19 differently which, in turn affected their outcomes. Given the stark differences in how nurses perceived their psychological distress, burnout, turnover intentions and performance across the journeys, the importance of understanding the cues (e.g. having autonomy) associated with each journey is apparent. Thus, our research provides clear guidance for managers to help them support nurses during redeployment.
护士对 COVID-19 调动的体验和感受及其对幸福感、绩效和离职意向的影响:多方法纵向研究。
背景在 Covid-19 期间,护士被重新部署到新的团队和专科,这是以前从未经历过的。我们试图了解在 COVID-19 大流行期间,护士如何理解正在进行的重新部署,以及这与他们的心理压力、职业倦怠、离职意向和感知绩效之间的关系。(参与者62名护士(90%为女性;83%为白人)在大流行期间经历了不同类型的重新部署,平均注册后工作经验为17年(平均年龄为41岁)。方法我们收集了来自 62 名护士的访谈和调查数据,时间跨度为 2020-2021 年的两个或三个时间点,并试图通过笔画肖像分析找到经验模式的共性和差异。研究发现,在护士应对 COVID-19 重新部署的过程中,身份认同和意识形成的模式相互交织。研究发现,护士在应对 COVID-19 调动的过程中,身份认同和意识形成交织在一起,形成了三种明显的 "旅程",涉及作为护士的职业认同和对所在组织的认同。处于 "旅程一":"组织认同和职业认同保持"(n = 28)的护士在幸福感、职业倦怠、绩效和留任方面都取得了最佳结果。经历了 "组织认同感降低但专业认同感保持 "历程的护士(人数= 24)保持了他们的专业认同感,但他们对组织的认同感有所下降。旅程三的护士:同时贬低组织认同和职业认同"(10 人)在幸福感、职业倦怠、绩效和留任方面的结果最差。突出的护士身份引发了委曲求全和坚韧不拔的行为,而控制、支持和环境意识等外部线索则影响了组织认同。鉴于护士们在不同旅程中对心理压力、职业倦怠、离职意向和工作表现的看法存在明显差异,了解与每段旅程相关的线索(如拥有自主权)的重要性显而易见。因此,我们的研究为管理者提供了明确的指导,帮助他们在重新部署期间为护士提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
81 days
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