Nurses’s Burnout and Anxiety about Risk of Infection toward Quality of Life during the COVID-19 Outbreak

https://doi.org/10.33860/jik.v16i3.1258

Authors

  • Ina Martiana Nursing, Faculty of Health Science, Universitas dr. Soebandi, Indonesia
  • Hendra Dwi Cahyono Nursing, Faculty of Health Science, Universitas dr. Soebandi, Indonesia

Keywords:

Anxiety, Burnout, COVID-19, Nurse, Quality of Life

Abstract

The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a global pandemic in all over countries. Nurses as frontline worker who taking care of infected patients and have high risk of being infected by COVID-19. This pandemic affects physical and psychological conditions of nurses. The aim of this study was to identify the correlation between nurse’s burnout and risk of infection anxiety toward quality of life. This study used descriptive cross-sectional design. A total of 102 participants joined this research. The participants were nurses who work in COVID-19 isolation room. The data collecting process has done by online. The participants filled informed consent and questionnaire by online questionnaire. The study was assessed by Professional Quality of Life-5 (ProQOL-5), C-19ASS (COVID-19 Anxiety Syndrome Scale), and CBI (Copenhagen Burnout Inventory). This study was analyzed using non-parametric Kruskal Wallis. The results of the study were 56.9% of respondents had a high level of anxiety, 50% of them experienced burnout. There is a significant relationship between length of work and quality of life of CS (p value = 0.048). There is also a relationship between burnout and STS quality of life (p value = 0.033). The pandemic situation is being fluctuated and people adapted to it. The anxiety and burnout feeling was also change anytime. The more nurses being prepared, the lower burnout, and having good quality of life. The good teamwork to support and feeling of being appreciate give good quality of life for nurses.

 

References

Rathnayake S, Dasanayake D, Maithreepala SD, Ekanayake R, Basnayake PL. Nurses’ perspectives of taking care of patients with Coronavirus disease 2019: A phenomenological study. PLOS ONE. 2021;16(9):1–17.

Lai J, Ma S, Wang Y, Cai Z, Hu J, Wei N, et al. Factors Associated With Mental Health Outcomes Among Health Care Workers Exposed to Coronavirus Disease 2019. JAMA network open. 2020 Mar 2;3(3):e203976–e203976.

Zhang Y, Ma ZF. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental Health and Quality of Life among Local Residents in Liaoning Province, China: A Cross-Sectional Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020 Mar 31;17(7):2381.

Gil-Lacruz M, Gil-Lacruz AI, Gracia-Pérez ML. Health-related quality of life in young people: the importance of education. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes. 2020;18(1):187.

Buselli R, Corsi M, Baldanzi S, Chiumiento M, Del Lupo E, Dell’Oste V, et al. Professional Quality of Life and Mental Health Outcomes among Health Care Workers Exposed to Sars-Cov-2 (Covid-19). International journal of environmental research and public health. 2020 Aug;17(17).

Nowrouzi B, Giddens E, Gohar B, Schoenenberger S, Bautista MC, Casole J. The quality of work life of registered nurses in Canada and the United States: a comprehensive literature review. International journal of occupational and environmental health. 2016 Oct;22(4):341–58.

Vianti RA, Hasanah N. Quality of life nurses on covid-19 pandemic with curhat online. 2021;10(1):71–6.

Pennbrant S, Dåderman A. Job demands, work engagement and job turnover intentions among registered nurses: Explained by work-family private life inference. Work (Reading, Mass). 2021;68(4):1157–69.

Ebrahimi H, Jafarjalal E, Lotfolahzadeh A, Kharghani Moghadam SM. The effect of workload on nurses’ quality of life with moderating perceived social support during the COVID-19 pandemic. Work (Reading, Mass). 2021;70(2):347–54.

Khasne RW, Dhakulkar BS, Mahajan HC, Kulkarni AP. Burnout among Healthcare Workers during COVID-19 Pandemic in India: Results of a Questionnaire-based Survey. Indian journal of critical care medicine : peer-reviewed, official publication of Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine. 2020 Aug;24(8):664–71.

Liu CY, Yang YZ, Zhang XM, Xu X, Dou QL, Zhang WW, et al. The prevalence and influencing factors in anxiety in medical workers fighting COVID-19 in China: a cross-sectional survey. Epidemiology and infection. 2020 May;148:e98.

Nikčević A V, Spada MM. The COVID-19 anxiety syndrome scale: Development and psychometric properties. Psychiatry research. 2020/07/22 ed. 2020 Oct;292:113322.

Alnazly E, Khraisat OM, Al-Bashaireh AM, Bryant CL. Anxiety, depression, stress, fear and social support during COVID-19 pandemic among Jordanian healthcare workers. PLOS ONE. 2021 Mar 12;16(3):e0247679.

Mo Y, Deng L, Zhang L, Lang Q, Liao C, Wang N, et al. Work stress among Chinese nurses to support Wuhan in fighting against COVID-19 epidemic. Journal of Nursing Management. 2020;28(5):1002–9.

Teo I, Chay J, Cheung YB, Sung SC, Tewani KG, Yeo LF, et al. Healthcare worker stress, anxiety and burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic in Singapore: A 6-month multi-centre prospective study. PLOS ONE. 2021 Oct 22;16(10):e0258866.

Naz S, Hashmi AM, Asif A. Burnout and quality of life in nurses of a tertiary care hospital in Pakistan. JPMA The Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association. 2016 May;66(5):532–6.

Remegio W, Rivera RR, Griffin MQ, Fitzpatrick JJ. The Professional Quality of Life and Work Engagement of Nurse Leaders. Nurse leader. 2020/09/08 ed. 2021 Feb;19(1):95–100

Published

2022-11-04

How to Cite

Martiana, I., & Cahyono, H. D. . (2022). Nurses’s Burnout and Anxiety about Risk of Infection toward Quality of Life during the COVID-19 Outbreak. Poltekita : Jurnal Ilmu Kesehatan, 16(3), 256–260. https://doi.org/10.33860/jik.v16i3.1258

Issue

Section

Original Articles

Similar Articles

<< < 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.