Reflections of Moral Suffering, Resilience, and Wisdom of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design and Sample
2.2. Measures
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
2.4. Qualitative Methods
3. Results
3.1. Experiences That Will Stay with You, Always
3.2. Wisdom Gained
3.3. Impact on Work
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Level Codes | Second Level Codes |
---|---|
Experiences that Stay with you | Moral suffering |
Fear for oneself and family | |
Seeing patient’s and family’s grace and resilience | |
Structural challenges/Lack of support | |
Wisdom Gained | Need to be calm, adaptable, and creative |
Take care of self and family | |
Practice self-compassion and grace | |
Impact on Work | Isolation and powerlessness |
Facing death and loss | |
No return to normal | |
Belief in one’s own ability and resilience. |
Experiences That Will Stay with You | Illustrative Quotes |
Moral suffering | “Not feeling good about any decisions. I have had to make over the past 8 months. No easy/right choice. Decision fatigue.” |
Fear for oneself and family | “Being afraid to be near my daughter who was working on a COVID 19 floor and her feeling like she could infect me. She and I were literally afraid to be near each other in the beginning.” |
Seeing patient’s and family’s grace and resilience | “I’m left without words or a true understanding of the mystery of the human spirit.” |
Structural challenges/Lack of support | “I will never forget the sudden realization that the management in our hospital system viewed social work as one of the first lines to go if the budget went south.” |
Wisdom Gained | Illustrative Quotes |
Need to be calm, adaptable, and creative | “Stay calm! We are supposed to be the calm ones in a stressful situation, and this doesn’t change with COVID.” |
Take care of self and family | “I don’t think that promoting self-care is helpful in this situation, I think the shift should be to self-protection and help with boundary setting and balance. Never before has personal life been so intertwined with work life regarding safety, recognition that everyone has a unique circumstance and has unique needs during this time and need major mental health support for staff. Staff are incredibly adaptable and speaking up is helpful (always), but especially during an unprecedented time when creativity is needed, and all ideas may be more welcomed.” |
Practice self-compassion and grace | “Take one day at a time. Advocate for yourself. Give yourself grace. Keep in contact with social work friends outside of the institution you work within to gain support outside the system as well.” |
“Social workers are always at the forefront of problem solving and critical thinking, whether during a pandemic or mass movements of fighting against racial injustice. Our patients/clients and our colleagues will always look to us for comfort, answers, hope and solace. It’s something I am always grateful for; however, I know it also comes with the price of having to be very self-aware of my own limits and boundaries and to allow myself grace and compassion when I need to take time to step back from being a helper.” | |
Impact on Work | Illustrative Quotes |
Isolation and powerlessness | “I really worry about the effects of the isolation.”“My biggest challenge has been isolation from family (elderly parents) and worry for everyone’s safety.” |
Facing death and loss | “COVID-19 restrictions were such a mixed blessing. one week before we were sent home my stepfather died and on the day of his funeral his nursing home closed to visitors. My mother felt so overwhelmed with everything and since I was now working from home, I was able to bring her to my house for long afternoon breaks from her space. My time at home allowed me unexpectedly to provide emotional support to her during this sad time. I am not sure we would have been able to be together as much if my work schedule had not changed.”“If appropriate, I may hug a mom of one of my patients, hold a hand, rub their back if they are upset. COVID does not allow for this personal touch anymore and I miss that.” |
No return to normal | “In our situation it has changed our lives almost completely and forced moving in new directions-wisdom: life continues-” |
Belief in one’s own ability and resilience | “This pandemic, amidst such a volatile political time, has made me even more fiercely unapologetic about fighting for the needs and rights of my patients and my peers. It’s highlighted the inequity in our healthcare system and has reinforced my passion for advocating for the under-served and the forgotten.” |
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Jones, B.; Cincotta, N.; Pelletier, W.; Fry, A.; Wiener, L. Reflections of Moral Suffering, Resilience, and Wisdom of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Curr. Oncol. 2022, 29, 6177-6185. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29090485
Jones B, Cincotta N, Pelletier W, Fry A, Wiener L. Reflections of Moral Suffering, Resilience, and Wisdom of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Current Oncology. 2022; 29(9):6177-6185. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29090485
Chicago/Turabian StyleJones, Barbara, Nancy Cincotta, Wendy Pelletier, Abigail Fry, and Lori Wiener. 2022. "Reflections of Moral Suffering, Resilience, and Wisdom of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic" Current Oncology 29, no. 9: 6177-6185. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29090485
APA StyleJones, B., Cincotta, N., Pelletier, W., Fry, A., & Wiener, L. (2022). Reflections of Moral Suffering, Resilience, and Wisdom of Pediatric Oncology Social Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Current Oncology, 29(9), 6177-6185. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29090485