Publication date: Oct 08, 2024
Intensive care unit (ICU) nurses have experienced a high degree of stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. While the literature on the consequences on emotional symptomatology is abundant, studies on the protective psychosocial variables that have contributed to buffering these consequences are scarcer. This study analyses the role of self-efficacy as a protective personality trait in ICU nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic, using a moderated mediation model that begins with the stress and anxiety experienced at the onset of the pandemic and concludes with the emotional exhaustion experienced 6 months later. Prospective longitudinal study with two data collection periods during the COVID-19 pandemic: (1) from 5 May to 21 June 2020 and (2) a follow-up 6 months after the state of alarm finalized (January-April 2021). These were both very stressful periods for ICU staff because of the COVID-19 pandemic. This study was conducted with 129 ICU nurses (a non-probabilistic convenience sample in the Spanish health care system). Socio-demographic, occupational and psychosocial variables (i. e. stress, anxiety, self-efficacy and emotional exhaustion) were assessed. Descriptive analyses, Pearson correlations, covariate analyses (i. e. Student’s t-test, one-factor ANOVA) and moderated mediation analyses were carried out (SPSS PROCESS macro, model 7). STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) reporting guidelines were followed. It shows that the higher the self-efficacy score, the lower the effect of stress on anxiety (p
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Nurses | anxiety |
Pandemic | nursing |
Pearson | pandemics |
Spanish | self‐efficacy |
stress |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 pandemic |
disease | MESH | emotional exhaustion |
disease | IDO | role |
disease | MESH | anxiety |
drug | DRUGBANK | Etoperidone |
disease | IDO | process |