4.6 Article

Nurses′ stressors and psychological distress during the COVID-19 pandemic: The mediating role of coping and resilience

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 77, Issue 3, Pages 1335-1344

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jan.14695

Keywords

coping; nurses; resilience and psychological distress; stressors

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The study shows that sources of stress during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic have a direct negative impact on nurses' psychological distress, with coping strategies and resilience playing important mediating roles. The findings emphasize the importance of problem-focused and emotion-focused coping strategies, as well as resilience, in maintaining nurses' mental health during stressful times.
Aims This study analyses the cross-sectional effect of sources of stress during the peak of COVID-19 pandemic on nurses ' psychological distress, focusing on the mediating role of coping strategies, both problem focused and emotion focused and resilience. Design Cross-sectional and quantitative analyses. Methods Structural equation modelling was performed using survey data obtained during the period between 1 April-25 May 2020 in a sample of 421 nurses from 39 Spanish provinces. Results Results confirmed that: (a) All the stressors have a significant, direct, and negative relationship with nurses ' psychological distress; (b) Emotion-focused strategies is negatively related to nurses ' psychological distress directly and indirectly through resilience; and (c) Problem-focused strategies is positively related to nurses ' psychological distress and negatively and indirectly through emotion-focused strategies. Conclusion This study identifies an important mediation sequence of stressors on psychological distress through the simultaneous concurrent effect of Problem-focused and Emotion-focused strategies and resilience. It shows that enacting the two coping mechanisms and resilience resources is important to achieve an adaptive effect on nurses ' mental health. Impact Nurses with insufficient preparation and those with high levels of fear of contagion do not enact proper coping strategies. Thus, these nurses need special consideration due to their risk of higher vulnerability.

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