2020
DOI: 10.1017/ipm.2020.105
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The impact of COVID-19 on health systems, mental health and the potential for nursing

Abstract: This paper offers a perspective on nursing and lived experience responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. It charts health systems and mental health impacts with a particular focus on children and adolescents, older people and people availing of mental health services. Issues of moral distress and the nursing reaction are considered alongside psychological and social concerns which continue to rapidly evolve. The perspective of a person attending adult community mental health services and the experience of engaging … Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…Often, HCWs were aware that the decisions they need to take and the practices they follow because of the pandemic are against what is appropriate for the patient [ 93 ]. HCWs are exposed to continuous and increasing levels of emotional strain and moral injury [ 94 ]. Dealing with the Covid-19 patients’ feelings of distress, as well as with the loss of big numbers of patients and colleagues are identified as significant psychosocial risk factors affecting HCWs’ mental health [ 88 , 94 , 95 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Often, HCWs were aware that the decisions they need to take and the practices they follow because of the pandemic are against what is appropriate for the patient [ 93 ]. HCWs are exposed to continuous and increasing levels of emotional strain and moral injury [ 94 ]. Dealing with the Covid-19 patients’ feelings of distress, as well as with the loss of big numbers of patients and colleagues are identified as significant psychosocial risk factors affecting HCWs’ mental health [ 88 , 94 , 95 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HCWs are exposed to continuous and increasing levels of emotional strain and moral injury [ 94 ]. Dealing with the Covid-19 patients’ feelings of distress, as well as with the loss of big numbers of patients and colleagues are identified as significant psychosocial risk factors affecting HCWs’ mental health [ 88 , 94 , 95 ]. A commentary [ 93 ] on nurses’ moral injury during the pandemic suggests that the shift from patient-centred ethics in healthcare to public health-centred ethics imposed by the current circumstances, represents a major challenge for nurses and triggers moral dilemmas in instances when practices of triage or patient prioritization take place and are in conflict with the duty to care for each particular patient.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The COVID‐19 pandemic has put extraordinary pressure on health systems around the world (Chuang et al., 2020; Livingston et al., 2020). With more than 28.5 million cases in the United States alone (The New York Times, 2020b), hospitals have struggled to obtain adequate supplies of PPE (Kamerow, 2020; Livingston et al., 2020), mechanical ventilators (Alharbi et al., 2020) and staff (Alharbi et al., 2020; Frawley et al., 2020; Morley et al., 2020). Over time, hospitals have expanded the number of intensive care beds to meet patient demand.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Children's voices may therefore go unheard and care delivered without their assent. Frawley et al (2020) argued that without a networked, integrated approach across traditional professional boundaries, the success of the nursing response to COVID-19 may be diminished.…”
Section: Child and Family Centered Care And Covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%