To Volunteer or Not? Perspectives towards Pre-Registered Nursing Students Volunteering Frontline during COVID-19 Pandemic to Ease Healthcare Workforce: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Design and Procedure
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Wavering Thoughts on Volunteering
“(It) was a very, very difficult decision… like how difficult I would say is the email has a deadline for us to submit, right? I submitted like only 10 min before the deadline because I was deciding right up till that point.”(FGD1, P2, volunteer)
3.1.1. Propelling Intrinsic Motivators
“There’s a lot of expectations for us to be competent… the nurses, physicians and all…they are already very stressed, so we don’t want to burden the rest also...”(FGD1, P1, volunteer)
“I feel uncertain… because… we just completed our (clinical) attachment (placement) and personally, I feel I’m not competent enough to enter a pandemic situation when my competency in a clinical setting isn’t stable.”(FGD6, P1, non-volunteer)
3.1.2. Accounting for Extrinsic Concerns
“The last factor would be my trust in the system, knowing that your PPE is ALL there...”(FGD2, P1, volunteer)
“Everyone was just going in the dark, and we were very much confident in the higher authority, like they will guide us.”(FGD3, P2, lecturer)
“Maybe because of our status as students we are not very clear on the decon procedures that hospital staff might be familiar with. So that kind of affects the confidence if I were to volunteer… what are the decontamination procedures afterward that (would) prevent me (from) bringing the virus out.”(FGD6, P3, non-volunteer)
“I did think of if I insisted on volunteering even though my family wasn’t really keen. Then, what (are the) consequences if I end up contracting the virus? And what kind of burden will (I) put onto the family, like financially and emotionally? So in the end, I just say ‘oh okay, maybe there will be other opportunities in the future to learn… I shouldn’t be risking everything else just for my own learning.”(FGD6, P5, non-volunteer)
3.2. Bringing Out “the Nurse” in Students through Volunteering
3.2.1. Displaying Personal Growth as a Nurse
“… they (the students) saw how people from the lab... work in a pair…they (the students) saw this kind of coordinated movements and tried to mimic…because every time if you want to prepare to do the things, it takes time. So, one person does passes (of requisites), the second person (does) the withdrawal (to) collect blood. Then you swap the job or roles. So that was also a very good thing they observed and learned.”(FGD3, P2, lecturer)
“It was really very encouraging to see how everyone put aside their roles and positions to come and work together… they didn’t care like how many doctors they have, how many nurses… senior nurses, how many students we have, as long as they meet the manpower needed… everyone just chip in and it doesn’t matter where you come from or your experience. It just matters you contribute.”(FGD 4, P4, volunteer)
‘I learned… to say sorry. It is truly a vital skill to be very frank and to say that I am new, and I accidentally screwed up or I didn’t manage to take blood. Would you allow me another try?”(FGD 4, P2, volunteer)
3.2.2. Ascertaining an Identity as a Nurse
“I would volunteer again. Because I felt like I played my part and I want to play my part in the situation.”(FGD4, P1, volunteer)
“… they had a lack of manpower and that affected their burden at work, so I felt that if I had volunteered, … my conscience (would have) felt a bit better.”(FGD6, P3, non-volunteer)
“(The) pandemic wasn’t really in the picture when I was considering to be a nurse... but now the pandemic becomes one of the things I have to overcome as a nurse…I will be willing to learn more about emergency preparedness.”(FGD6, P2, non-volunteer)
“We should have also considered and known that with this kind of education comes a certain responsibility.”(FGF4, P2, volunteer)
“It makes me feel like this is…what I can, what I like to do, and what I can foresee myself to do in the future... Like (if) you can go through these very bad times, you can go through more in the future.”(FGD2, P5, volunteer)
3.2.3. Entangled in the Student Role: “We Are Not Full Nurses Yet”
“The public and nation trust us, nurses and healthcare professionals to step up and use their specialized knowledge to help out. And, to add on, they are getting paid. But then, as humans we have every right to our lives…If patients have autonomy, I think nurses and doctors should have autonomy too... basically, knowledge is power. Power is like you can use it or you don’t. It is not an obligation.”(FGD 1, P1, volunteer)
3.3. Gearing Up to Volunteer
3.3.1. Healthcare and Non-Healthcare Volunteering Opportunities
“If there was an option of the logistics one, I might have gone. Because it’s really the direct contact that I was worried about, especially with parents who are quite elderly and vulnerable.”(FGD5, P1, non-volunteer)
3.3.2. Operational Workflow in Managing Student Volunteers
“Initially when they send out the email, … the commitment is 5 days a week, 7 h a day… it seemed more daunting. But when I hear from my friend’s experiences, it’s not that frequent...”(FGD 7, P3, non-volunteer)
“They were also very kind. If we had any difficulties locating the vein or taking the blood, we could approach any of the experienced people and they would do it for us very willingly.”(FGD 2, P4, volunteer)
P3 (FGD 4): “Moving forward, … instead of having the clinical (placement), (as) in like the clean cases, like maybe in the wards, why don’t we give another option for students to clock in clinical hours… during the pandemic…?”
Moderator: “… That means the volunteer(ing) to be counted as clinical hours?”
P3 (FGD 4): “Yes. Because at least we have the best I would say, best of both worlds (of) being in the clean zone.”
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Nursing Students | Lecturers (n = 3) | |
---|---|---|---|
Volunteers (n = 15) | Non-Volunteers (n = 15) | ||
Gender | |||
Female | 9 | 13 | 2 |
Male | 6 | 2 | 1 |
Age (Mean ± SD) | 23.5 ± 2.0 | 22.6 ± 0.9 | - |
Ethnicity | |||
Chinese | 15 | 12 | 1 |
Malay | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Indian | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Other | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Previous volunteering experience | |||
Yes | 14 | 9 | - |
No | 1 | 5 | - |
Prefer not to say | 0 | 1 | - |
|
Theme | Sub-Theme | Reduced Codes |
---|---|---|
Wavering thoughts on volunteering | Propelling intrinsic motivators |
|
Accounting for extrinsic concerns |
| |
Bringing out “the nurse” in students through volunteering | Displaying personal growth as a nurse |
|
Ascertaining the identity as a nurse |
| |
Entangled in the student role: “we are not full nurses yet” |
| |
Gearing up to volunteer | Healthcare and non-healthcare volunteering opportunities |
|
Operational workflow in managing student volunteers |
|
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Seah, B.; Ho, B.; Liaw, S.Y.; Ang, E.N.K.; Lau, S.T. To Volunteer or Not? Perspectives towards Pre-Registered Nursing Students Volunteering Frontline during COVID-19 Pandemic to Ease Healthcare Workforce: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 6668. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126668
Seah B, Ho B, Liaw SY, Ang ENK, Lau ST. To Volunteer or Not? Perspectives towards Pre-Registered Nursing Students Volunteering Frontline during COVID-19 Pandemic to Ease Healthcare Workforce: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(12):6668. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126668
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeah, Betsy, Ben Ho, Sok Ying Liaw, Emily Neo Kim Ang, and Siew Tiang Lau. 2021. "To Volunteer or Not? Perspectives towards Pre-Registered Nursing Students Volunteering Frontline during COVID-19 Pandemic to Ease Healthcare Workforce: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 12: 6668. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126668
APA StyleSeah, B., Ho, B., Liaw, S. Y., Ang, E. N. K., & Lau, S. T. (2021). To Volunteer or Not? Perspectives towards Pre-Registered Nursing Students Volunteering Frontline during COVID-19 Pandemic to Ease Healthcare Workforce: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(12), 6668. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18126668