Perceptions and Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic amongst Frontline Nurses and Their Relatives in France in Six Paradoxes: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
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- RN for Registered Nurse, NS for Nursing Student, CRNA for Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist, NM for Nurse Manager;
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- GS for Geriatric Service, PACU for Post-Anesthesia Care Unit, ICU for Intensive Care Unit, PS for Pool Service, M for Medicine, NH: Nursing Home;
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- a (f) was attached at the end of the pseudonym when the data were related to a family member.
3.1. The Silence Paradox
“We were in our service but the atmosphere was so strange... It was as if death was there all the time in the service above.”RN-GS
“There was a lack of support and information from the management. A soldier needs his captain to be there to boost and encourage him.”CRNA-PACU
“I tried to talk to my husband about it, but as he’s not involved in healthcare, I know that he’s quite sensitive about it, so I didn’t want to worry him.”NS-ICU
“She didn’t even talk about what was going on, and didn’t tell me what was going on at the hospital. She kept it to herself so I thought it must have been difficult and she wanted to protect us.”RN-PS (f)
“However, at 8 pm, it was a bit like a meeting of all the neighbors and we applauded. The children: it was good for them to know that we were applauding for their parents.”NMS-ICU(f)
“There was also an anxiety related to TV reports and I preferred to cut it off because it was too focused on the number of deaths per day…My spouse was requisitioned, and I was stressed by that.”CRNAS-ICU (f)
3.2. The Hero Paradox
“I was stressed about my health because people like me [with a history of cancer] were vulnerable so I wondered if I was doing something stupid on the way to work. Afterwards, I thought yes I was more at risk, but that is my job after all.”CRNA-PACU
“Through this crisis, you discover yourself as a professional with knowledge and skills. A feeling of pride in everything I’ve accomplished, reassured to see that I could do things that I thought were insurmountable, pride in myself, pride in a profession where people have unlimited self-sacrifice.”CRNA-ICU
“Afterwards, this outbreak showed me even more how bad things are at hospital: all the problems nurses usually experience have been multiplied tenfold.”RN-M (f)
“We were angry, we don’t even talk about money: we just talk about a thank you, it would have been nice if the management had simply thanked us.”NM-ICU
“For me, nurses are not recognized for their commitment, their efforts, their daily risks. In my opinion, it is not a medal on July 14th that will give them the recognition they deserve. They must have the salaries they need…There are years of studies. We have to give them the means to work well. It’s their lives they are putting at stake.”RN-PS (f)
“We were considered a bit pestiferous, people were afraid of us, afraid that we might contaminate them, afraid that we might be contagious.”NS-M
3.3. The Workforce Paradox
“I think the hospital is as sick as its patients… We are asked to take upon ourselves. It can be exhausting. It is true that sometimes when you are in a department with very few staff, you can talk about suffering.”RN-GS
“My colleagues were very worried about the virus. Actually, many of them, who considered themselves to be at risk, refused to work. A lot of nursing assistants refused to enter rooms, for example to give breakfast to patients in the COVID-ward, obliging me, my fellow trainees, and other nurses to do this work for them, which added to the workload.”NS-GS
“There was a very good atmosphere between colleagues. There was a kind of working cohesion where everyone helped each other. I was able to rediscover a working atmosphere that I had known a long time ago and which had disappeared with the budget cuts. It gave me the strength to tell myself that I wasn’t alone.”CRNA-ICU
3.4. The Learning Paradox
“My fellow nursing students were like me, not very reassured, as their position was unclear. We didn’t know if we were considered as a nursing student or as a nurse assistant.”NS-GS
“I had the impression that the students were taken hostage and were unable to follow their training. And that is the collateral effects of COVID because they experienced it very badly and me too because it was necessary to support them, to accompany them, and it was complicated to manage.”NM-ICU
“It was an opportunity for me to work under such conditions. And as a student, the fact of being positioned both as a support for the team and as a student was formative and helped me getting new skills: autonomy, taking initiatives.”NS-ICU
“It was an opportunity for me to work under such conditions. It helped me getting new skills.”NS-ICU
3.5. The Symbolic Exchange Paradox
“Some residents died, they were completely suffocating and nothing could be done: it was difficult…These images chased me for a while.”RN-NH
“The care was different because of the protective outfits we had to put on. It’s a different approach of care, as everything that has to do with touch or even smiling, we didn’t have that anymore or at least we limited it.”NS-GS
“The families could not see the people who had died, but in addition there were no religious rites and they were only washed with water.”RN-M
“It was extremely violent to apply Do Not Resuscitate choices for people in their 70s, without risk factors. It’s complicated to tell them that there is no place in ICU for them.”NP-M
“I was infected three months ago and I still have symptoms of COVID. Total exhaustion with asthma-like respiratory discomfort, muscular pain: I currently have a post-COVID syndrome, which is disabling. I can’t do a lot of activities, because otherwise I have to sleep and I’m exhausted. I’m angry because I was sent to work, even when I was sick. And now I’m paying the price.”RN-NH
“For two months we didn’t live for the family, we lived around COVID.”CRNA-PACU
“I still had a feeling of guilt because even if you come home, you’re not too available to do anything else. Helping the children in their homework, even on days off, I couldn’t do it.”CRNA-ICU
“When I came home, the children didn’t want to come near me, they even gave me the name Mummy COVID and said: ‘No kisses Mummy because you’re COVID!’ So there was this distance between my family and me because I had to protect them.”NS-NH
“We felt supported during this whole period by the outside, by the people who clapped every night, by the people who delivered meals, by the drawings. This multiple support carried us, as perhaps unconsciously, it has helped us to better overcome this crisis, to get through it. There was a real surge of solidarity.”RN-GS
3.6. The Uncertainty Paradox
“I was stressed to bring the virus home. So, I tried to set a strategy to avoid that…I’ve had patients who got sick because their spouse is a healthcare worker, one of them died and I didn’t want that to happen to me.”CRNA-ICU
“We couldn’t protect ourselves as we should have. As if we were thrown into the lion’s den. Because in the beginning, the protocol was to put on masks only if patients coughed. Then afterwards, there were some who didn’t cough but who got COVID, so we were told to put on surgical masks, and then if they tested positive, to put on N95 masks and glasses…We didn’t feel protected by the protocols.”NS-M
“Nurses in non-acute services did not feel they were treated in the same way as those working in COVID units. They lived this situation very badly and felt forgotten by the management.”RN-ICU
“I’m thinking of changing my profession to go towards what is human, such as sophrology and relaxation, because I have the impression that there is no longer any humanity, either with the patients or the staff.”RN-NH
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Chandler-Jeanville, S.; Nohra, R.G.; Loizeau, V.; Lartigue-Malgouyres, C.; Zintchem, R.; Naudin, D.; Rothan-Tondeur, M. Perceptions and Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic amongst Frontline Nurses and Their Relatives in France in Six Paradoxes: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 6977. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18136977
Chandler-Jeanville S, Nohra RG, Loizeau V, Lartigue-Malgouyres C, Zintchem R, Naudin D, Rothan-Tondeur M. Perceptions and Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic amongst Frontline Nurses and Their Relatives in France in Six Paradoxes: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(13):6977. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18136977
Chicago/Turabian StyleChandler-Jeanville, Stephanie, Rita Georges Nohra, Valerie Loizeau, Corinne Lartigue-Malgouyres, Roger Zintchem, David Naudin, and Monique Rothan-Tondeur. 2021. "Perceptions and Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic amongst Frontline Nurses and Their Relatives in France in Six Paradoxes: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 13: 6977. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18136977
APA StyleChandler-Jeanville, S., Nohra, R. G., Loizeau, V., Lartigue-Malgouyres, C., Zintchem, R., Naudin, D., & Rothan-Tondeur, M. (2021). Perceptions and Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic amongst Frontline Nurses and Their Relatives in France in Six Paradoxes: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(13), 6977. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18136977