2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.iccn.2022.103279
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Critical care nurses’ perception of moral distress in intensive care during the COVID-19 pandemic – A pilot study

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Cited by 14 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…According to Henrich et al (2016), nurses were concerned when aggressive care continued, even when the decision to switch to comfort care was made, when the decision was made on a weekend or at night; physicians commonly wanted to wait until after the weekend or until the next morning to implement the plan, for their own convenience rather than patients' best interests. This finding was confirmed by Prompahakul et al (2021), who found that ICU nurses were disturbed when they saw patients suffering as a result of overly aggressive and unnecessary treatments that they believed were not in the best interest of the patient Futile care has been described in several studies as a factor that triggers moral distress among ICU nurses (Andersson et al, 2022;Asayesh et al, 2018;Hiler et al, 2018;Karagozoglu et al, 2017;Prompahakul et al, 2021;Shoorideh et al, 2012). Futile care can be defined on the basis of survival or subsequent quality of life, and includes aggressive treatments or end-of-life interventions in patients with very low life expectancy or chance of recovery (Asayesh et al, 2018).…”
Section: End-of-life Carementioning
confidence: 85%
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“…According to Henrich et al (2016), nurses were concerned when aggressive care continued, even when the decision to switch to comfort care was made, when the decision was made on a weekend or at night; physicians commonly wanted to wait until after the weekend or until the next morning to implement the plan, for their own convenience rather than patients' best interests. This finding was confirmed by Prompahakul et al (2021), who found that ICU nurses were disturbed when they saw patients suffering as a result of overly aggressive and unnecessary treatments that they believed were not in the best interest of the patient Futile care has been described in several studies as a factor that triggers moral distress among ICU nurses (Andersson et al, 2022;Asayesh et al, 2018;Hiler et al, 2018;Karagozoglu et al, 2017;Prompahakul et al, 2021;Shoorideh et al, 2012). Futile care can be defined on the basis of survival or subsequent quality of life, and includes aggressive treatments or end-of-life interventions in patients with very low life expectancy or chance of recovery (Asayesh et al, 2018).…”
Section: End-of-life Carementioning
confidence: 85%
“…Almost all of the articles in this review indicated that the powerlessness of ICU nurses in the face of organizational obstacles and constraints is one of the main causes of their moral distress while working with patients (Altaker et al, 2018;Andersson et al, 2022;Browning, 2013;Choe et al, 2015;Epstein et al, 2019;McAndrew et al, 2018;Morley et al, 2022;Prompahakul et al, 2021;Sannino et al, 2019;Shoorideh et al, 2012).…”
Section: Powerlessnessmentioning
confidence: 92%
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