When Nurses Become Patients. Validation of the Content of the Diagnostic Label Professional Traumatic Grief
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The content validation of a new diagnostic label;
- To determine the degree of representativeness of each of the defining characteristics (DCs) of the proposed label;
- To determine the degree of representativeness of the other factors related (RFs) to the proposed label to evaluate the need for inclusion of the diagnosis in the NANDA-I taxonomy II.
2. Materials and Methods
Instruments and Variables
- (a)
- Sociodemographic variables. To determine the demographic data of the experts, a questionnaire was used to collect personal data including the variables sex (Male, Female), age, academic degree (ATS/Diplomatura/Degree in Nursing, Specialty, University Expert/Non-official Master’s Degree, Official Master’s Degree, DEA/Research Proficiency, Doctorate), position in the institution in which they work (Nurse, Specialist Nurse, Case Manager, Coordinator, Teacher), and time of experience in the position (years).
- (b)
- Diagnostic label designation from definition to be named by the panel experts according to the options provided to them. The definition agreed upon by the research team was: “State of physical, psychological and social discomfort experienced by health professionals and caused by prolonged exposure to multiple sudden deaths in the work context.” The designations for the diagnostic label were: job distress, professional exhaustion, professional traumatic grief and professional shock.
- (c)
- Defining characteristics of the diagnosis. Participants were provided with a list of 33 DCs identified as the most indicative ones detected in the literature [42,43,44,45], corresponding to: fear, helplessness, shortness of breath, psychomotor agitation, guilt, anger, stress, sadness, rage, irritability, panic attacks, disturbed sleep pattern, anxiety, dizziness, feeling of unreality, state of confusion, anguish, emotional exhaustion, depression, somatisation, flashbacks, depersonalisation (clinical and listless attitude towards other patients or people), feeling of dullness, hopelessness, intrusive thoughts, tiredness, social isolation, tension, tremors, weakness, gastrointestinal disorders (stomach pain, diarrhoea, nausea, etc.), behavioural alterations (tobacco, alcohol, etc.). The experts had to identify in the chosen diagnosis those characteristics that are most representative or that can be manifested in a sufficient number of cases. For this purpose, the participants were given different values, “not at all representative”, “not very representative”, “somewhat representative”, “fairly representative” and “very representative”, to rate their degree of agreement with respect to the relationship between the defining characteristics and the diagnosis provided.
- (d)
- Diagnosis-related factors. Participants were also provided with a list of 10 RFs identified as the most representative ones detected in the literature [38,46,47,48,49,50], corresponding to: traumatic nature of the death, having witnessed sudden unexpected deaths, lack or limitation of social support, anticipatory fear (perception of more catastrophes), having witnessed multiple losses, high emotional burden, scarcity of material and human resources, work overload, high demand for care and lack of knowledge of the problem to be treated. As with the DCs, the panel of experts was asked to assess the representativeness of the proposed etiological factors.
3. Data Analysis
4. Results
5. Discussion
6. Limitations
7. Conclusions
8. Implications for Clinical Practice
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variables | N | Mean (SD) | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|
Sex | |||
Male | 46 | 21.90 | |
Female | 164 | 78.10 | |
Age | 42.7 (11.1) | ||
Length of experience in position | 15.2 (11.3) | ||
Academic background | |||
Nurse | 148 | 70.48 | |
Nurse Practitioner | 31 | 14.76 | |
University Expert | 11 | 5.24 | |
Official Master | 11 | 5.24 | |
Doctoral program | 1 | 0.48 | |
Doctorate | 8 | 3.81 | |
Position | |||
Nurse | 159 | 75.71 | |
Nurse Practitioner | 25 | 11.90 | |
Nurse Case Manager | 3 | 1.43 | |
Coordinator | 14 | 6.67 | |
Teacher | 9 | 4.29 | |
Experience in the position where you work | |||
Primary Care | 52 | 13.67 | |
Hospitalisation | 155 | 84.7 | |
Teaching | 3 | 1.64 |
Defining Characteristics | Score (DCV) * | Type of Characteristic |
---|---|---|
Sadness | 0.9429 (0.11) | Major ** |
Stress | 0.8901 (0.18) | Major |
Impotence | 0.8737 (0.21) | Major |
Fear | 0.8022 (0.25) | Major |
Emotional exhaustion | 0.7936 (0.23) | Minor *** |
Sleep pattern disturbance | 0.7895 (0.24) | Minor |
Fatigue | 0.7809 (0.23) | Minor |
Anxiety | 0.7573 (0.24) | Minor |
Guilt | 0.7514 (0.29) | Minor |
Rage | 0.7445 (0.29) | Minor |
Anger | 0.7431 (0.28) | Minor |
Wrath | 0.7253 (0.30) | Minor |
Hopelessness | 0.7141 (0.26) | Minor |
Tension | 0.7064 (0.24) | Minor |
Anguish | 0.6921 (0.23) | Minor |
Irritability | 0.6730 (0.26) | Minor |
Gastrointestinal disorders | 0.6598 (0.27) | Minor |
Behavioural alterations | 0.6402 (0.28) | Minor |
Depression | 0.6265 (0.27) | Minor |
Feeling of dullness | 0.6148 (0.27) | Minor |
Flashbacks | 0.6116 (0.26) | Minor |
Social isolation | 0.5785 (0.29) | Rejected **** |
Somatisation | 0.5669 (0.29) | Rejected |
Difficulty breathing | 0.5291 (0.28) | Rejected |
Intrusive thoughts | 0.5102 (0.28) | Rejected |
Panic attacks | 0.5102 (0.31) | Rejected |
Psychomotor agitation | 0.5058 (0.30) | Rejected |
Depersonalisation | 0.4942 (0.32) | Rejected |
Feeling of unreality | 0.4942 (0.32) | Rejected |
Weakness | 0.4753 (0.29) | Rejected |
Confusion | 0.4491 (0.31) | Rejected |
Tremors | 0.3823 (0.29) | Rejected |
Vertigo | 0.3750 (0.30) | Rejected |
Related Factors | Score (DCV) * | Type of Factor |
---|---|---|
Witnessing multiple losses | 0.8178 (0.27) | Major ** |
High demand for care | 0.7936 (0.22) | Minor *** |
Work overload | 0.7922 (0.23) | Minor |
Witnessing sudden unexpected deaths | 0.7897 (0.28) | Minor |
High emotional charge | 0.7657 (0.23) | Minor |
Shortage of material and human resources | 0.7202 (0.24) | Minor |
Lack of knowledge of the problem to be treated | 0.7199 (0.31) | Minor |
Traumatic nature of death | 0.7095 (0.26) | Minor |
Lack of or limited social support | 0.6750 (0.23) | Minor |
Anticipatory request | 0.6279 (0.25) | Minor |
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Gilart, E.; Lepiani, I.; Núñez, M.J.C.; Roman, I.C.; Bocchino, A. When Nurses Become Patients. Validation of the Content of the Diagnostic Label Professional Traumatic Grief. Healthcare 2021, 9, 1082. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081082
Gilart E, Lepiani I, Núñez MJC, Roman IC, Bocchino A. When Nurses Become Patients. Validation of the Content of the Diagnostic Label Professional Traumatic Grief. Healthcare. 2021; 9(8):1082. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081082
Chicago/Turabian StyleGilart, Ester, Isabel Lepiani, María José Cantizano Núñez, Inmaculada Cabrera Roman, and Anna Bocchino. 2021. "When Nurses Become Patients. Validation of the Content of the Diagnostic Label Professional Traumatic Grief" Healthcare 9, no. 8: 1082. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081082
APA StyleGilart, E., Lepiani, I., Núñez, M. J. C., Roman, I. C., & Bocchino, A. (2021). When Nurses Become Patients. Validation of the Content of the Diagnostic Label Professional Traumatic Grief. Healthcare, 9(8), 1082. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081082