Primary Health Care Case-Management Nurses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Design
2.2. Participants, Sampling and Recruitment
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Sociodemographic Characteristics of the Sample
3.2. Analysis Categories
3.3. CMNs’ Competencies
3.3.1. Workload
The work volume drew my attention at that moment, it was a new situation that I‘d never experienced before…(3_SSD_62_W)
It was overwhelming because we had no rest there, I used to work in the mornings, afternoons and nights and also during the weekends all day long… I think that we worked quite a deal, it was exhausting…(5_SSD_63_W)
Exclusive dedication…always keeping an eye on the phone…, always ready each time they called us from the nursing home, total commitment(4_SSD_55_W)
3.3.2. Nursing Homes
Huge organization work in the nursing homes, managing and preventing outbreaks and in relation to their size…(10_SD_61_W)
(…) we medicalized and we worked really hard with the professionals…(18_SD_58_M)
It meant an important increase in work for me, the contingency plan issue, whether you have to include it in the platform, a lot of bureaucracy too that made things work…(16_SD_59_M)
(…) we helped them run the nursing home, somewhat to plan everything(17_SD_55_W)
3.3.3. Changes in the Competencies
(…) we went there for specific issues and suddenly they tell us that we should train the nursing home’s workers(31_ESD_63_W)
It’s all been centralized in our case in the nursing homes, where each time there was an outbreak, which was practically every day, then I think that our work has been extremely important, the thing is that we’ve stopped doing purely case management tasks(12_SD_53_M)
If we had to apply a vaccine, we applied a vaccine, the homes, following-up the contacts it was quite a thing(15_SD_65_W)
(…) besides, when the first COVID-positive case is discharged, we have to go to their house to take a sample… the CMN that supposedly knows best has to go…. Well, there goes the CMN to safely take the first sample from a patient that tested positive(31_ESD_63_W)
As I see it, the home aid assistants have been great collaborators, they were our eyes and I‘ve felt that I‘ve helped them a lot, that I was their reference and I‘ve felt really well(30_ESD_50_W)
(…) we also worked with local associations telling them what to do, how to protect themselves…(15_SD_65_W)
The pandemic made workshops and meetings to be lost, all things related to teamwork with the meetings and in the community…(15_SD_65_W)
The workshops for caregivers were suspended…(31_ESD_63_W)
(…) I kept making home visits in the middle of the pandemic, obviously fewer than before(12_SD_53_M)
Case-management nurses have always been ready from the beginning of the pandemic, we haven’t stopped making our home visits, assisting the patients we had in the homes with severe health problems(1_ESD_62_W)
Work was never stopped, assigning priorities because some lines had to be done no matter what, with nursing homes among them(23_AD_43_W)
3.4. Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.4.1. Technological Progress
(…) a lot of technological progress, it’s true that technologies have advanced, information and communication technologies have progressed with this thing of the pandemic and this may be one of the positive aspects. Teleconsultations…(28_NSD_49_W)
We had the advantage of doing quite a lot of telework, in my case that I work in several centers for example…(7_SSD_58_M)
3.4.2. Institutional Relations and Social Recognition
With this issue of the pandemic it was bad for us on the one hand and very good on the other, because our work has finally been valued(1_SSD_62_W)
It looks as if people respect us a little bit more now. We’ve shown that we’re efficient and that the system needs us(24_AD_62_W)
(…) both older adults and the boards and other institutions like convents have acknowledged this to us, also people belonging to different age groups… everything that came up, hotels for the homeless, hotels for refugees, immigrants…(2_SSD_58_W)
3.4.3. Comradeship
The connections to other sectors with which we didn’t get so much in contact were strengthened for sure, with epidemiology, with other units, inspections in nursing homes(11_SD_50_W)
(…) the relationship with all the nursing homes was improved, now I know them like the back of my hand(6_SSD_57_W)
To help my peers, who really had a lot of nursing homes, I volunteered to lend a hand and I‘ve had seven nursing homes and three day units to serve besides my job(2_SSD_58_W)
We went there every day, we assembled a medical team from my health center, the three of us went, we weren’t the physician, the nurse or the CMN, no, we were three people from the health center that got in there to help(17_SD_55_W)
3.4.4. Burnout Syndrome
I‘ve been really afraid and then the carry-over with this saturation, with the nursing homes… I ended up burned out, I‘ve recovered physically and psychologically with some wear out(14_SD_56_W)
I haven’t gotten over it yet… it’s like when you fracture a bone and they say that it hurts when the climate changes… well I still have it there…(17_SD_55_W)
It was awful for me and I have to tell you that I‘m still somewhat affected with this…(3_SSD_62_W)
The experience from my case management years in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic is one of the worst nightmares that you might come across in life(8_SSD_58_M)
(…) my personal life was quite affected, my family life, my three children, well they used to tell me: “But today too, mum?”. Easter, Christmas, 2020 was a bad year… due to the consequences of the pandemic(6_SSD_57_W)
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Public Involvement Statement
Guidelines and Standards Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Primary Health Care Districts in the Province of Seville | Abbreviations Districts | Frequency of Case-Management Nurses | Frequency of the Sample |
---|---|---|---|
Eastern Seville | ESD | 5 | 4 |
Southern Seville | SSD | 13 | 7 |
Seville | SD | 25 | 13 |
Aljarafe | AD | 9 | 4 |
Northern Seville | NSD | 9 | 3 |
Categories | Subcategories | Frequency of the Verbatim Testimonies |
---|---|---|
Case-management nurses’ competencies | Workload | 13 |
Nursing homes | 20 | |
Changes in the competencies | 43 | |
Consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic | Technological progress | 10 |
Institutional relations and social recognition | 12 | |
Comradeship | 19 | |
Burnout syndrome | 20 |
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Molina-Gil, M.J.; Guerra-Martín, M.D.; Diego-Cordero, R.D. Primary Health Care Case-Management Nurses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. Nurs. Rep. 2024, 14, 1119-1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14020084
Molina-Gil MJ, Guerra-Martín MD, Diego-Cordero RD. Primary Health Care Case-Management Nurses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. Nursing Reports. 2024; 14(2):1119-1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14020084
Chicago/Turabian StyleMolina-Gil, María José, María Dolores Guerra-Martín, and Rocío De Diego-Cordero. 2024. "Primary Health Care Case-Management Nurses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study" Nursing Reports 14, no. 2: 1119-1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14020084
APA StyleMolina-Gil, M. J., Guerra-Martín, M. D., & Diego-Cordero, R. D. (2024). Primary Health Care Case-Management Nurses during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. Nursing Reports, 14(2), 1119-1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14020084