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      Professional burnout of nursing team working to fight the new coronavirus pandemic Translated title: Esgotamento profissional da equipe de enfermagem atuante no enfrentamento à pandemia do novo coronavírus Translated title: Agotamiento profesional del equipo de enfermería que trabaja para combatir la nueva pandemia de coronavirus

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          Abstract

          ABSTRACT Objective: to identify burnout and associated factors among nursing workers working in coping with COVID-19. Methods: a cross-sectional study, developed in four hospitals in a capital in southern Brazil. Sample (n=499) composed of nurses and nursing technicians/assistants, who answered an online form containing socio-occupational characterization and the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Descriptive and inferential statistical analysis was performed, including multiple comparison tests. Results: burnout was identified in 60 (12%) workers, with no significant difference between hospitals, but with a difference in dimensions between them. In the emotional exhaustion dimension, a higher proportion (52.9%) was found at a moderate level. Prevalence of high level of professional achievement of 95.4% was identified. Conclusion: the presence of burnout was significantly prevalent among nurses and females. It reinforces the need to develop strategies to promote the health of nursing workers, providing improvement in health services and reduction of care and labor risks.

          Translated abstract

          RESUMO Objetivo: identificar o esgotamento profissional e fatores associados entre trabalhadores de enfermagem atuantes no enfrentamento à COVID-19. Métodos: estudo transversal, desenvolvido em quatro hospitais de uma capital da Região Sul do Brasil. Amostra (n=499) composta por enfermeiros e técnicos/auxiliares de enfermagem, que responderam formulário online contendo caracterização sociolaboral e o Inventário de Burnout de Maslach. Realizou-se análise estatística descritiva e inferencial, incluindo testes de comparação múltipla. Resultados: identificado burnout em 60 (12%) trabalhadores, sem diferença significativa entre os hospitais, mas com diferença nas dimensões entre os mesmos. Na dimensão exaustão emocional, foi constatada maior proporção (52,9%) em nível moderado. Prevalência de alto nível de realização profissional de 95,4%. Conclusão: a presença de burnout foi significativamente prevalente entre os enfermeiros e no sexo feminino. Reforça-se necessidade de elaboração de estratégias de promoção da saúde do trabalhador de enfermagem, proporcionando melhoria dos serviços de saúde e redução dos riscos assistenciais e laborais.

          Translated abstract

          RESUMEN Objetivo: identificar el agotamiento profesional y factores asociados entre los trabajadores de enfermería que trabajan en el afrontamiento del COVID-19. Métodos: estudio transversal, desarrollado en cuatro hospitales de una capital de la región sur de Brasil. Muestra (n=499) compuesta por enfermeros y técnicos/auxiliares de enfermería, que respondieron un formulario en línea que contiene la caracterización sociolaboral y el Inventario de Burnout de Maslach. Se realizó análisis estadístico descriptivo e inferencial, incluyendo múltiples pruebas de comparación. Resultados: se identificó burnout en 60 (12%) trabajadores, sin diferencia significativa entre hospitales, pero con diferencia de dimensiones entre ellos. En la dimensión de agotamiento emocional se encontró una mayor proporción (52,9%) en un nivel moderado. Prevalencia de alto nivel de logro profesional del 95,4%. Conclusión: la presencia de burnout fue significativamente prevalente entre enfermeras y mujeres. Refuerza la necesidad de desarrollar estrategias para promover la salud de los trabajadores de enfermería, brindando mejora en los servicios de salud y reducción de riesgos asistenciales y laborales.

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          The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) Statement: Guidelines for Reporting Observational Studies

          Introduction Many questions in medical research are investigated in observational studies [1]. Much of the research into the cause of diseases relies on cohort, case-control, or cross-sectional studies. Observational studies also have a role in research into the benefits and harms of medical interventions [2]. Randomised trials cannot answer all important questions about a given intervention. For example, observational studies are more suitable to detect rare or late adverse effects of treatments, and are more likely to provide an indication of what is achieved in daily medical practice [3]. Research should be reported transparently so that readers can follow what was planned, what was done, what was found, and what conclusions were drawn. The credibility of research depends on a critical assessment by others of the strengths and weaknesses in study design, conduct, and analysis. Transparent reporting is also needed to judge whether and how results can be included in systematic reviews [4,5]. However, in published observational research important information is often missing or unclear. An analysis of epidemiological studies published in general medical and specialist journals found that the rationale behind the choice of potential confounding variables was often not reported [6]. Only few reports of case-control studies in psychiatry explained the methods used to identify cases and controls [7]. In a survey of longitudinal studies in stroke research, 17 of 49 articles (35%) did not specify the eligibility criteria [8]. Others have argued that without sufficient clarity of reporting, the benefits of research might be achieved more slowly [9], and that there is a need for guidance in reporting observational studies [10,11]. Recommendations on the reporting of research can improve reporting quality. The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) Statement was developed in 1996 and revised 5 years later [12]. Many medical journals supported this initiative [13], which has helped to improve the quality of reports of randomised trials [14,15]. Similar initiatives have followed for other research areas—e.g., for the reporting of meta-analyses of randomised trials [16] or diagnostic studies [17]. We established a network of methodologists, researchers, and journal editors to develop recommendations for the reporting of observational research: the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) Statement. Aims and Use of the STROBE Statement The STROBE Statement is a checklist of items that should be addressed in articles reporting on the 3 main study designs of analytical epidemiology: cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies. The intention is solely to provide guidance on how to report observational research well: these recommendations are not prescriptions for designing or conducting studies. Also, while clarity of reporting is a prerequisite to evaluation, the checklist is not an instrument to evaluate the quality of observational research. Here we present the STROBE Statement and explain how it was developed. In a detailed companion paper, the Explanation and Elaboration article [18–20], we justify the inclusion of the different checklist items and give methodological background and published examples of what we consider transparent reporting. We strongly recommend using the STROBE checklist in conjunction with the explanatory article, which is available freely on the Web sites of PLoS Medicine (http://www.plosmedicine.org/), Annals of Internal Medicine (http://www.annals.org/), and Epidemiology (http://www.epidem.com/). Development of the STROBE Statement We established the STROBE Initiative in 2004, obtained funding for a workshop and set up a Web site (http://www.strobe-statement.org/). We searched textbooks, bibliographic databases, reference lists, and personal files for relevant material, including previous recommendations, empirical studies of reporting and articles describing relevant methodological research. Because observational research makes use of many different study designs, we felt that the scope of STROBE had to be clearly defined early on. We decided to focus on the 3 study designs that are used most widely in analytical observational research: cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies. We organised a 2-day workshop in Bristol, UK, in September 2004. 23 individuals attended this meeting, including editorial staff from Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, International Journal of Epidemiology, JAMA, Preventive Medicine, and The Lancet, as well as epidemiologists, methodologists, statisticians, and practitioners from Europe and North America. Written contributions were sought from 10 other individuals who declared an interest in contributing to STROBE, but could not attend. Three working groups identified items deemed to be important to include in checklists for each type of study. A provisional list of items prepared in advance (available from our Web site) was used to facilitate discussions. The 3 draft checklists were then discussed by all participants and, where possible, items were revised to make them applicable to all three study designs. In a final plenary session, the group decided on the strategy for finalizing and disseminating the STROBE Statement. After the workshop we drafted a combined checklist including all three designs and made it available on our Web site. We invited participants and additional scientists and editors to comment on this draft checklist. We subsequently published 3 revisions on the Web site, and 2 summaries of comments received and changes made. During this process the coordinating group (i.e., the authors of the present paper) met on eight occasions for 1 or 2 days and held several telephone conferences to revise the checklist and to prepare the present paper and the Explanation and Elaboration paper [18–20]. The coordinating group invited 3 additional co-authors with methodological and editorial expertise to help write the Explanation and Elaboration paper, and sought feedback from more than 30 people, who are listed at the end of this paper. We allowed several weeks for comments on subsequent drafts of the paper and reminded collaborators about deadlines by e-mail. STROBE Components The STROBE Statement is a checklist of 22 items that we consider essential for good reporting of observational studies (Table 1). These items relate to the article's title and abstract (item 1), the introduction (items 2 and 3), methods (items 4–12), results (items 13–17) and discussion sections (items 18–21), and other information (item 22 on funding). 18 items are common to all three designs, while four (items 6, 12, 14, and 15) are design-specific, with different versions for all or part of the item. For some items (indicated by asterisks), information should be given separately for cases and controls in case-control studies, or exposed and unexposed groups in cohort and cross-sectional studies. Although presented here as a single checklist, separate checklists are available for each of the 3 study designs on the STROBE Web site. Table 1 The STROBE Statement—Checklist of Items That Should Be Addressed in Reports of Observational Studies Implications and Limitations The STROBE Statement was developed to assist authors when writing up analytical observational studies, to support editors and reviewers when considering such articles for publication, and to help readers when critically appraising published articles. We developed the checklist through an open process, taking into account the experience gained with previous initiatives, in particular CONSORT. We reviewed the relevant empirical evidence as well as methodological work, and subjected consecutive drafts to an extensive iterative process of consultation. The checklist presented here is thus based on input from a large number of individuals with diverse backgrounds and perspectives. The comprehensive explanatory article [18–20], which is intended for use alongside the checklist, also benefited greatly from this consultation process. Observational studies serve a wide range of purposes, on a continuum from the discovery of new findings to the confirmation or refutation of previous findings [18–20]. Some studies are essentially exploratory and raise interesting hypotheses. Others pursue clearly defined hypotheses in available data. In yet another type of studies, the collection of new data is planned carefully on the basis of an existing hypothesis. We believe the present checklist can be useful for all these studies, since the readers always need to know what was planned (and what was not), what was done, what was found, and what the results mean. We acknowledge that STROBE is currently limited to three main observational study designs. We would welcome extensions that adapt the checklist to other designs—e.g., case-crossover studies or ecological studies—and also to specific topic areas. Four extensions are now available for the CONSORT statement [21–24]. A first extension to STROBE is underway for gene-disease association studies: the STROBE Extension to Genetic Association studies (STREGA) initiative [25]. We ask those who aim to develop extensions of the STROBE Statement to contact the coordinating group first to avoid duplication of effort. The STROBE Statement should not be interpreted as an attempt to prescribe the reporting of observational research in a rigid format. The checklist items should be addressed in sufficient detail and with clarity somewhere in an article, but the order and format for presenting information depends on author preferences, journal style, and the traditions of the research field. For instance, we discuss the reporting of results under a number of separate items, while recognizing that authors might address several items within a single section of text or in a table. Also, item 22, on the source of funding and the role of funders, could be addressed in an appendix or in the methods section of the article. We do not aim at standardising reporting. Authors of randomised clinical trials were asked by an editor of a specialist medical journal to “CONSORT” their manuscripts on submission [26]. We believe that manuscripts should not be “STROBEd”, in the sense of regulating style or terminology. We encourage authors to use narrative elements, including the description of illustrative cases, to complement the essential information about their study, and to make their articles an interesting read [27]. We emphasise that the STROBE Statement was not developed as a tool for assessing the quality of published observational research. Such instruments have been developed by other groups and were the subject of a recent systematic review [28]. In the Explanation and Elaboration paper, we used several examples of good reporting from studies whose results were not confirmed in further research – the important feature was the good reporting, not whether the research was of good quality. However, if STROBE is adopted by authors and journals, issues such as confounding, bias, and generalisability could become more transparent, which might help temper the over-enthusiastic reporting of new findings in the scientific community and popular media [29], and improve the methodology of studies in the long term. Better reporting may also help to have more informed decisions about when new studies are needed, and what they should address. We did not undertake a comprehensive systematic review for each of the checklist items and sub-items, or do our own research to fill gaps in the evidence base. Further, although no one was excluded from the process, the composition of the group of contributors was influenced by existing networks and was not representative in terms of geography (it was dominated by contributors from Europe and North America) and probably was not representative in terms of research interests and disciplines. We stress that STROBE and other recommendations on the reporting of research should be seen as evolving documents that require continual assessment, refinement, and, if necessary, change. We welcome suggestions for the further dissemination of STROBE—e.g., by re-publication of the present article in specialist journals and in journals published in other languages. Groups or individuals who intend to translate the checklist to other languages should consult the coordinating group beforehand. We will revise the checklist in the future, taking into account comments, criticism, new evidence, and experience from its use. We invite readers to submit their comments via the STROBE Web site (http://www.strobe-statement.org/).
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            Mental Health of Medical Workers in Pakistan during the Pandemic COVID-19 Outbreak

            On January 30, 2020, WHO (World Health Organization) announced the occurrence of the novel coronavirus and declared a PHEIC (Public Health Emergency of International Concern), which is the sixth PHEIC under the IHR (International Health Regulations) after H1N1 Influenza (2009), Polio (2014), Ebola in West Africa (2014), Zika (2016), Ebola in DRC (2019) (Euro-surveillance Editorial, 2020). On February 11, 2020, novel coronavirus was officially named by WHO as Corona Virus Disease 2019 – COVID-19. The pandemic not only brought the high mortality rate from the viral infection but also psychological rest and mental catastrophe to the rest of the world (Xiao, 2020). Such uncertainty and unpredictability of pandemic outbreak of infectious disease from its clinical presentation, infectious causes, epidemiological features, fast transmission pattern, seriousness of public health impact, novelty, scale, implication for international public health, and underprepared health facilities to address the pandemic outbreak of COVID-19 have considerably high potential for psychological fear contagion as well and often result in prevalent multitude of psychological problems such as fear, anxiety, stigma, prejudice, marginalization towards the disease and its relation of all people ranging from healthy to at-risk individuals to care-workers (Mak et al., 2009). Mass quarantine could cause a sense of collective hysteria, fear, and anxiety in health workers working in hospitals, inpatient and outpatient care, large tertiary care centers, community based hospitals, primary care settings, nursing homes, assisted living facilities and all isolation units. The medical health-care workers who are exposed and in direct contact with the confirmed and suspected coronavirus cases are vulnerable to both high risk infection and mental health problems – worried, scared, experiencing bereavement and trauma. With the advent of COVID-19 in Pakistan, medical workers have been under physical and psychological pressure including high risk of infection, inadequate equipment for safety from contagion, isolation, exhaustion, and lack of contact with family. The severity is causing further mental health problems which not only effect medical workers’ decision making ability but could also have long term detrimental effect on their overall well-being. The unremitting stress medical health-care workers is experiencing could trigger psychological issues of anxiety, fear, panic attacks, posttraumatic stress symptoms, psychological distress, stigma and avoidance of contact, depressive tendencies, sleep disturbances, helplessness, interpersonal social isolation from family social support and concern regarding contagion exposure to their friends and family. The sudden role reversal from a healthcare provider to the COVID-19 confirmed or suspected patient potentially lead to sense of frustration, helplessness, and adjustment challenges in healthcare professionals. Fear of labeling, stigmatization and discrimination potentially impede healthcare workers intent to seek counselling and psychotherapeutic interventions (Zheng, 2020). Despite the common mental health problems and psychosocial issues among healthcare workers in such settings, most health professionals do not often seek or receive a systematic mental health care (Xiang et al., 2020). Healthcare workers and professionals’ –who work under high stress environment – emotional and behavioral responses are naturally adaptive in the face of extreme (unpredictable and uncertain) stress, and thus counselling and psychotherapy based on the stress-adaptation model might act as early and prompt intervention. Addressing the mental health issues in medical workers is thus important for the better prevention and control of the pandemic (Banerjee, 2020). Medical workers usually are rotated within the state’s provinces to care for confirmed or suspected cases, strengthen logistic support and ease the pressure on health-care personnel. In such case, online and electronic media broadcast medical advice on how to prevent the risk of transmission between patients and medical workers in medical setting could reduce the pressure on medical workers. A detailed psychological crisis intervention plan should be developed: a) by building a mental health intervention medical team to provide online courses for awareness of psychological impact of stressful events to guide medical workers, b) and a psychological assistance hotline intervention for medical workers to discuss their psychological concerns with the trained and specialized team of mental health practitioners. Hospitals in this regard should provide frequent shift-system, guarantee food and living supplies, offer pre-job training to address identification and responses to psychological issues in patients, families, and themselves. Moreover, psychological counselors/counselling psychologists should regularly visit medical workers to listen to their stories for their catharsis and provide support. To deal with the secondary mental health problems involved in the COVID-19 pandemic, urgent psychological crisis intervention model (PCIM) should be developed and implemented through the medium of internet technology. This PCIM integrate teams of physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists/mental health practitioners, and social workers to deliver early psychological intervention to patients, families and medical staff. Diverse range of measures implemented across various health-care settings would assist swift, smooth and safer early screening and intervention and later rehabilitation. Epidemiological data on mental health consequences, psychological impact, psychiatric morbidity and psychosocial issues with the advent of COVID-19 and their screening, assessment, control, treatment plans, management, progress reports, health status updates, prevention and intervention has yet to be explored to respond to these challenges. This publication marks the preliminary initiation of guidance to provide multifaceted mental health dynamics and psychological intervention of medical workers in Pakistan. Financial Disclosure The authors declare no financial disclosure related to the submission. Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest
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              Nurse staffing, burnout, and health care-associated infection.

              Each year, nearly 7 million hospitalized patients acquire infections while being treated for other conditions. Nurse staffing has been implicated in the spread of infection within hospitals, yet little evidence is available to explain this association. We linked nurse survey data to the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council report on hospital infections and the American Hospital Association Annual Survey. We examined urinary tract and surgical site infection, the most prevalent infections reported and those likely to be acquired on any unit within a hospital. Linear regression was used to estimate the effect of nurse and hospital characteristics on health care-associated infections. There was a significant association between patient-to-nurse ratio and urinary tract infection (0.86; P = .02) and surgical site infection (0.93; P = .04). In a multivariate model controlling for patient severity and nurse and hospital characteristics, only nurse burnout remained significantly associated with urinary tract infection (0.82; P = .03) and surgical site infection (1.56; P < .01) infection. Hospitals in which burnout was reduced by 30% had a total of 6,239 fewer infections, for an annual cost saving of up to $68 million. We provide a plausible explanation for the association between nurse staffing and health care-associated infections. Reducing burnout in registered nurses is a promising strategy to help control infections in acute care facilities. Copyright © 2012 Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                reben
                Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem
                Rev. Bras. Enferm.
                Associação Brasileira de Enfermagem (Brasília, DF, Brazil )
                0034-7167
                1984-0446
                2022
                : 75
                : suppl 1
                : e20210498
                Affiliations
                [1] Porto Alegre Rio Grande do Sul orgnameUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul Brazil
                [2] Porto Alegre Rio Grande do Sul orgnameHospital Moinhos de Vento Brazil
                [3] Porto Alegre Rio Grande do Sul orgnameComplexo Hospitalar Irmandade Santa Casa de Misericórdia de Porto Alegre Brazil
                Article
                S0034-71672022000300211 S0034-7167(22)07500000211
                10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0498
                34852038
                0891fe08-3094-464f-9456-12d15ededa52

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 07 August 2021
                : 28 September 2021
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 33, Pages: 0
                Product

                SciELO Revista de Enfermagem


                Salud Laboral,Grupo de Enfermería,Infecciones por Coronavirus,Agotamiento Profesional,Enfermagem,Saúde do Trabalhador,Nursing, Team,Occupational Health,Nursing,Esgotamento Profissional,Infecções por Coronavírus,Equipe de Enfermagem,Enfermería,Burnout, Professional,Coronavirus Infections

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