An Exploratory Study of ICU Pediatric Nurses’ Feelings and Coping Strategies after Experiencing Children Death
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Researchers Characteristic
2.3. Context: Setting/Site and Salient Contextual Factors
2.4. Sample
2.5. Data Collection Methods
2.6. Data Analysis
2.7. Research Rigidity
2.8. Ethics Approval and Consent to Participate
3. Results
3.1. Negative Feelings about Coping with the Death of a Child in the ICU
3.1.1. Grief, Frustration, and Sadness over the Death of the Child
“... a failure, in general... then in particular it can be each case different... but death is a failure here, it is taken as a failure.”E4P2L1
“... well, for me... a feeling of impotence for not being able to do more... here you do your utmost to save that child... you try to do everything possible... and sometimes the impossible is also attempted... that is why when the child dies, it is a failure.”E3P1L20
“When a child dies, all the time you have invested in him/her is lost... and all your effort, the hopes that you put in that treatment is going to work,... that the venous cannulation that you are doing... and that is costing you a lot of effort and time... is going to contribute to saving the child... and when he passes away... all that effort... that not sleeping next to the child... that stress that you have lived through for the child... has been for nothing. ...”E3P3L2
“... it makes you question whether it’s worth all the effort... even if it’s worth studying so much... so that in the end the children die of the things you have studied...” ”... a loss, because of the loss of the child.”E4P3L3
“… when an elderly man dies... it is easy to justify himself... because he is a person who has already lived his life... when a child dies, a person dies with his whole life ahead of him.. it is a loss, for society... for his family, because of what has happened to him, in general a loss.”E1P2L12
“... you take those feelings home with you... you take them with you; ... it’s inevitable... I mean… you can’t leave those sad feelings here… you hang up your pyjamas, and you’re going to get married, like a new person??? ... No… that’s impossible... many times when we are with a child who is critically ill, or who may die at any moment... we take the children home in your mind… (figuratively…) ... we try not to think about him... but you want to call the colleagues who are working... to know how is he/she... but you make an effort not to do it...”E7P1L11
“… we all feel the death of a child we are treating… the auxiliary staff... the doctors, and us (nurses)... when a child dies, the unit becomes silent... silent... only the sounds are heard noises from monitors and alarms from infusion pumps… until a few hours after death, there is no laughter in the unit... and that we are very smiling and funny...”E7P1L18
“... the ending would have improved... so that makes me feel that I haven’t done it as well as I could, and that we ourselves are the ones who don’t let things come when healing, that we already know that this doesn’t work... but still… so you think that sometimes you could have done better…”E4P2L12
“…there are times when you think you could have done more and I’m not saying it for technical care... but for things related to the family… perhaps the ending would not have changed... he would have died the same... but perhaps because it would have ended in a better way.”E8P2L2
3.1.2. Fear and Helplessness towards the Parents
“... some parents... have been very upset when it has been said that the child has died,... and… we let them be with them (their child).. and they are seeing that we don’t stop working to save their child... but some parents... you know... they start screaming... they look at us badly... and when they start hitting things and screaming because of the pain... I feel afraid... in case they attack us or something...”E1P1L18
“... I have only seen a few aggressive cases... but I understand them... because it is a very hard situation... if that were to happen to me... losing a child... I don’t know how I would react...”E4P2L4
“When the child dies and I have to go into the box to do something... I don’t know what to say to the family... especially if I told them a while ago, ‘don’t worry, don’t be afraid... you must be calm…your son are in good hands... and in the best place to recover....’ And when in a while that same family comes in to see their deceased child... well, my face falls with shame and makes me want to cry... because I think that I have generated part of that pain... with false hopes.”E6P1L19
3.2. Wrong Care Models: Sympathy Instead of Empathy
“Death is difficult to accept for most people who lose a relative or loved one... and also for the nurse who works with children... because most of the time we end up having a... relationship of empathy... with the parents and the children... very great, because of the time they remain hospitalized and because of the good relationship that is created with the relatives.”E6P2L2
“... the parents when I talk to them are grateful and the fact that you cry with them because then they see that you have felt the same and that comforts them a little bit to feel that with you at that moment... it helps both of you to mourn.”E4P1L21
“... the fact that I am a mother helps me to get closer to those parents... I try to get closer to them because I would like them to get closer to me if I were in the case...”E10P2L2
3.3. Coping Strategies in the Face of the Death of the Child Admitted to the ICU
“The nurse needs to draw enormous strength from within himself, he needs, at these moments, to adopt a feeling of coldness that often does not belong to him. Holding back the tears... it is not always possible, but it often becomes essential!”E10P1L18
“It is important for nurses to know how to control their emotions so as not to harm or diminish their professional development.”E9P1L11
“... if I have to cry I cry… I prefer to cry at home... but when I am at work, I have to be there... and hold on like a champion... so I separate myself a little bit emotionally so as not to cry with them, for that child they have just lost... I am also a mother...”E7P1L16
“After a bad day... where one of the children I care for dies... I sit and cry in the car, alone... before I get home... so that they don’t see me and worry. I like my job… but I don’t want others to think I don’t… because I cry when I come out of it and have a bad day.”E6P2L5
“... I can’t talk about these feelings of sadness at home; nobody would understand them... or at least they would get tired of hearing them; nobody wants you to say that a one-year-old child died on your shift, after falling into a swimming pool and drowning, after more than 3 h of unsuccessful resuscitation. And that you’re the one who died... you swallow these things. It’s part of our job.”E5P2L3
“... I deal with them (negative feelings) with another colleague, who I know has had a bad time, and I know she will understand me... I just want her to listen to me... and when I get it off my chest... I feel better.”E8P2L6
“(What’s helps me... ?) … Verbalizing it without a doubt, saying it out loud seems to make it real, it helps to say it... we also know how to support each other in that sense, we generally do feel the support among ourselves.”E6P2L9
“... I try to hide, when I get home... to have my children or my husband tells me things... things that distract me... those occupy my mind, and don’t make me think about the child I left in the hospital... I don’t want to be alone...”E2P2L3
“.. I give hugs and kisses (more than usual) to all my family, especially my children and my husband... I am lucky that what happened to the family I just left in the hospital doesn’t happen to me.”E4P2L16
“I do physical exercise... it’s a way of releasing tension and adrenaline... I clear my head by running or cycling... what I couldn’t do would be quiet things like reading a book or watching a sad movie.”E7P2L6
3.4. Lack of Training and Institutional Support
“... I don’t cry because I don’t know where my limit is as a professional... I don’t know if it is good for me to cry for my patient with his parents, or if that is not professional... if they had taught me how to manage it, I could tell you, look, if I can do this, I can shed a tear... but as we are not taught emotion management tools, each one learns how he/she can.”E6P2L1
“... because we don’t have any training despite having been here... for many years, we don’t have any training on what to do well and at least we have concluded that there are many times what it is better not to do when you don’t know what to do.”E4P2L2
“... it is true that here we have had to learn in fits and starts.”E6P1L18
“... this experience has increased our knowledge, even if it’s self-taught, as they say, by beating ourselves up.”E2P2L1
“It is notorious the lack of preparation of the professional to deal with death (...) This confrontation is always difficult because we are not prepared (...) although death is an event present every day or more frequently.”E1P2L5
“I would appreciate the presence of a psychologist at the center to help me manage the knot in my stomach with which I have gone home, some days because I don’t know how to deal with the bad (...).”E4P2L8
“I think that the psychologist is important on a general level... on a personal level, it is very important... on a personal level, it is very important... I think that tomorrow another child will come to me with the same circumstance and if I am still suffering because of a previous child... I won’t be able to do my job well... and then in the end you get into the same loop...”E5P2L16
“Yes, it is important to have a person to help us with those negative feelings... and to deal with the families... and help us with all that.”E9P2L1
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nickname | Gender | Age (Years) | Married/Children | Nurse Experience (Years) | PICU Experience (Years) | ICU Adult Experience (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
E1 | Female | 22 | No/No | 2 | 1 | No |
E2 | Female | 24 | Yes/No | 2 | 1 | No |
E3 | Female | 31 | Yes/Yes | 8 | 8 | No |
E4 | Female | 36 | Yes/Yes | 12 | 12 | No |
E5 | Female | 36 | Yes/Yes | 13 | 13 | No |
E6 | Female | 37 | Yes/Yes | 14 | 14 | No |
E7 | Female | 42 | Yes/Yes | 21 | 18 | Yes |
E8 | Female | 42 | Yes/Yes | 21 | 15 | Yes |
E9 | Female | 43 | Yes/Yes | 22 | 16 | Yes |
E10 | Male | 47 | Yes/Yes | 25 | 22 | No |
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Share and Cite
Anguis Carreño, M.; Marín Yago, A.; Jurado Bellón, J.; Baeza-Mirete, M.; Muñoz-Rubio, G.M.; Rojo Rojo, A. An Exploratory Study of ICU Pediatric Nurses’ Feelings and Coping Strategies after Experiencing Children Death. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1460. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11101460
Anguis Carreño M, Marín Yago A, Jurado Bellón J, Baeza-Mirete M, Muñoz-Rubio GM, Rojo Rojo A. An Exploratory Study of ICU Pediatric Nurses’ Feelings and Coping Strategies after Experiencing Children Death. Healthcare. 2023; 11(10):1460. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11101460
Chicago/Turabian StyleAnguis Carreño, Mirian, Ana Marín Yago, Juan Jurado Bellón, Manuel Baeza-Mirete, Gloria María Muñoz-Rubio, and Andrés Rojo Rojo. 2023. "An Exploratory Study of ICU Pediatric Nurses’ Feelings and Coping Strategies after Experiencing Children Death" Healthcare 11, no. 10: 1460. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11101460
APA StyleAnguis Carreño, M., Marín Yago, A., Jurado Bellón, J., Baeza-Mirete, M., Muñoz-Rubio, G. M., & Rojo Rojo, A. (2023). An Exploratory Study of ICU Pediatric Nurses’ Feelings and Coping Strategies after Experiencing Children Death. Healthcare, 11(10), 1460. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11101460