PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Understanding inequities in nurses’ moral distress during COVID-19

New research from Penn Nursing shows how poorer resources and communication in hospitals where Black patients predominantly access care impacts feelings of moral distress among nurses

2024-06-07
(Press-News.org) Research has shown that, when nurses feel they are being prevented from taking a morally justifiable action or achieving an ethical outcome, it contributes to poor mental health, burnout, and intent to leave one’s job. Surveys from the COVID-19 pandemic found that a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) and lack of perceived support from hospital administrators were associated with higher levels of this moral distress.

University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing researchers and their collaborators hypothesized that nurses working in hospitals where Black patients predominantly access care—which they call Black-serving hospitals, or BSHs—would suffer greater moral distress, since these hospitals were disproportionately affected by the pandemic and generally have fewer resources.

In a new study published in the journal Nursing Outlook, they found that the percentage of nurses experiencing moral distress was twice as high in hospitals with the highest share of Black patients, and that poor leadership communication contributed to the greater moral distress.

“The nurses had poorer support from their leaders and poorer access to personal protective equipment, they’re caring more frequently for COVID patients, and they’re reporting greater moral distress, all of which is an inequitable burden for the nurses in those hospitals,” says lead author Eileen T. Lake, professor of nursing at Penn and associate director of the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research (CHOPR). She says this is a social justice issue for the nurses.

While the survey data were collected from 3,675 nurses at 90 hospitals in March and April 2021, the paper notes that Black-serving hospitals are also likely to be disproportionately impacted in the post-pandemic nurse staffing crisis. Lake says that, since burnout is largely driven by workload and work environment, she expected that post-pandemic burnout would be worse in hospitals serving a higher share of Black patients.

To survey acute care nurses, the researchers recruited hospitals through the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators, and they used data from the 2019 Medicare Provider Analysis and Review to classify hospitals by the percentage of Black patients from low-BSH to high-BSH.

The nurses were presented with nine moral distress situations and asked to rate the frequency and extent of distress. Two conditions they were surveyed on, for example, were “caring for patients who die during a hospitalization without family and/or clergy present” and “witnessing a lack of respect among health care team for patients from vulnerable populations or minority groups.”

The researchers found that 4% of nurses in the high-BSH category of hospitals experienced high moral distress compared to 2% in the low-BSH category, nurses showed less moral distress in hospitals with better leadership communication, and nurses working in high-BSH hospitals were more likely to disagree that leadership communication was transparent, effective, or timely. Nurses in high-BSH hospitals also reported caring for patients with COVID-19 more frequently and experiencing worse access to PPE.

“Moral distress remains an ongoing bioethical issue, and we are losing qualified nurses because of it,” says co-author Connie M. Ulrich, the Lillian S. Brunner Chair in Medical and Surgical Nursing at Penn Nursing. “This study highlights the need to close the inequity gaps in BSHs and find innovative ways to support nurses in the day-to-day care of patients and families and lessen the physical and emotional burdens they carry.”

The authors acknowledge there was much uncertainty during the acute phase of the pandemic and information changed daily, but they write that disseminating email newsletters and organizing staff huddles could strengthen leadership communication. They also put forth the idea of a BSH designation through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services so that hospitals exceeding a certain percentage of Black patients could acquire greater resources.

“One of the interesting aspects of this paper is that it points to managerial factors as an important part of the solution to the problem of moral distress among nurses” says co-author Jeannette A. Rogowski, an economist at Penn State University. “For hospitals that are resource constrained, such as many BSH hospitals, increasing nursing staff may be difficult. However, fewer resources are likely needed to enact managerial interventions such as increasing leadership communication.”

Lake explains that she and Rogowski began working together two decades ago to research why low-birth-weight Black infants had worse outcomes than their white counterparts. They found these outcomes were associated with lower nurse staffing levels and poorer work environments in neonatal intensive care units. Over the years, Lake says, they decided to broaden their focus to ask about outcomes in high-BSH hospitals more broadly.

About eight years ago, they started working with Jessica G. Smith, a former postdoctoral research fellow at CHOPR who is now an assistant professor of nursing at the University of Texas at Arlington. Smith is a co-author on the new paper along with Ulrich, a bioethicist with experience studying moral distress. Another co-author, Nehemiah Weldeab of the Department of Behavioral Health Sciences in Penn Nursing, is a data analyst.

“The multidisciplinary nature of this team was essential to producing the paper and the insights that it brought regarding the role of management in reducing moral distress among nurses in BSH hospitals,” Rogowski says.

Eileen T. Lake is the Edith Clemmer Steinbright Professor in Gerontology, professor of nursing and sociology, and associate director of CHOPR in the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.

Connie M. Ulrich is the Lillian S. Brunner Chair in Medical and Surgical Nursing, a professor of nursing, and a professor of medical ethics and health policy in Penn Nursing.

Jessica G. Smith is an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Arlington College of Nursing and Health Innovation.

Jeannette A. Rogowski is a professor of health policy and administration at the Penn State University College of Health and Human Development.

Nehemiah Weldeab was an intern in the Biostatistics Evaluation Collaboration Consultation Analysis Lab in the Department of Behavioral Health Sciences in Penn Nursing.

Other authors are Penn Nursing’s Vaneh Hovsepian, the Perelman School of Medicine’s Hal Chen, and Children’s Mercy Kansas City’s Emily Cramer.

This study was funded by the Office of Nursing Research in Penn Nursing.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Flavor unleashed: a scientific journey into the world of table grapes

Flavor unleashed: a scientific journey into the world of table grapes
2024-06-07
In a recent study, scientists have unlocked the secrets behind the diverse flavors of table grapes. By examining 38 different cultivars, the research offers unprecedented insights into the volatile compounds that shape our taste experiences, paving the way for enhanced grape quality and flavor. The flavor of table grapes, influenced by various volatile compounds, plays a significant role in consumer preference and marketability. Traditional flavor analysis methods often fail to capture the complexity and diversity of grape flavors, especially in hybrid varieties. Conventional flavor classifications like muscat and foxy are insufficient for describing the wide range of flavors ...

Shrinking statures, growing insights: unraveling the genetic underpinnings of dwarfism in squash

Shrinking statures, growing insights: unraveling the genetic underpinnings of dwarfism in squash
2024-06-07
Unlocking the secrets of nature, a pioneering study has pinpointed a gene mutation with profound implications for plant height and stress tolerance. The discovery lies in the CpDWF5 gene, whose alteration leads to a compact squash plant with a unique resistance to salt stress, marking a leap forward in agricultural science. In the quest to bolster crop yields and fortify plants against environmental stressors, the delicate interplay of phytohormones stands as a keystone. Yet, our grasp of these genetic levers, particularly those dictating plant stature and resilience to salinity, remains tenuous. Bridging ...

Fat molecule’s inability to bond with shape-shifting protein in cell’s powerhouse linked to an inherited metabolic disease

Fat molecule’s inability to bond with shape-shifting protein in cell’s powerhouse linked to an inherited metabolic disease
2024-06-07
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE By studying mutations in yeast and human cells, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found that biochemical bonds between fats and proteins in the mitochondrion, the cell’s powerhouse, play a crucial role in how our cells produce energy. The study results, published June 5 in The EMBO Journal, shed new light, researchers say, on the way the altered mitochondrial membranes found in people with metabolic diseases such as Barth syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that weakens the heart, fail to enable cellular power production. Metabolism is a set of biochemical reactions central to making energy to fuel life and to getting rid of substances a body no ...

Wildfire smoke reached 99% of U.S. lakes in 2019-2021

Wildfire smoke reached 99% of U.S. lakes in 2019-2021
2024-06-07
Where there’s smoke, there’s not necessarily fire. Wildfire smoke, sometimes drifting from hundreds of miles away, touched nearly every lake in North America for at least one day per year from 2019 to 2021, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.  Even more significantly, the study, published in the journal Global Change Biology, found that 89% of the lakes in North America experienced smoke for more than 30 days during each of those three years of intense wildfire activity. “That was surprising, even ...

Basic income can double global GDP while reducing carbon emissions

Basic income can double global GDP while reducing carbon emissions
2024-06-07
Giving a regular cash payment to the entire world population has the potential to increase global gross domestic product (GDP) by 130%, according to a new analysis published June 7 in the journal Cell Reports Sustainability. Researchers suggest that charging carbon emitters with an emission tax could help fund such basic income program while reducing environmental degradation. “We are proposing that if we can couple basic income with environmental protection, we can save two birds with one stone,” says first author U. Rashid Sumaila of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Sumaila has been working on ending harmful fishery subsidies worldwide, but many people who rely ...

The rate, nature and transmission of mitochondrial DNA mutations in humans

The rate, nature and transmission of mitochondrial DNA mutations in humans
2024-06-07
A new study from deCODE genetics uses pedigrees and sequence data from 64,806 Icelanders to shed light on the rate and nature of mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and the peculiar dynamics of its maternal transmission. In a paper published today in Cell, scientists from deCODE genetics, a subsidiary of Amgen, present the largest study to date of germline mtDNA mutations in humans and their transmission across 116,663 mother-child pairs. The study documents the astonishing extent of hypermutability at some positions in mtDNA, including the well-known deleterious A>G mutation at position 3243 which causes the MELAS syndrome. The mutation ...

Prevalence of iron deficiency using 3 definitions among women in the US and Canada

2024-06-07
About The Study: Three definitions of iron deficiency were associated with significantly different prevalence of iron deficiency in women, regardless of self-reported age, pregnancy, or race and ethnicity. Using higher serum ferritin thresholds to define iron deficiency could lead to diagnosis and treatment of more women with iron deficiency and greater reduction of related morbidity.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, James C. Barton, M.D., email bartonjames336@gmail.com. To access the embargoed study: ...

Bariatric metabolic surgery vs glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and mortality

2024-06-07
About The Study: Bariatric metabolic surgery was associated with greater reduced mortality compared with first-generation glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) among individuals with a diabetes duration of 10 years or less, mediated via greater weight loss in this cohort study. No differences in the risk for mortality were observed between the treatment modalities among individuals with a longer duration of diabetes, nor in the occurrence of nonfatal major adverse cardiovascular events among all patients.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, ...

Primary cilia restrict autoinflammation by mediating PD-L1 expression

Primary cilia restrict autoinflammation by mediating PD-L1 expression
2024-06-07
Ciliopathies are multisystem disorders characterized by the dysfunction of motile and/or non-motile cilia, which show common clinical manifestations of ciliopathies include retinal degeneration, mental retardation, renal abnormality, obesity, and skeletal dysplasia. Fibrosis of vital organs, characterized by the extensive deposition of extracellular matrix components, represents another complication frequently observed in patients and animal models of ciliopathies. However, the precise mechanism that connects ciliary defects to fibrosis remains largely elusive. The recent study led by Dr. Min Liu (Haihe Laboratory of Cell Ecosystem) and Dr. Yunfan Yang (Shandong University) showed ...

Roots of resistance: unveiling the soil-saving secrets of grafting

Roots of resistance: unveiling the soil-saving secrets of grafting
2024-06-07
Grafting, an age-old horticultural technique, has been revealed as a powerful tool against soil-borne diseases like crown gall. New research uncovers how the composition of root exudates changes when plants are grafted onto resistant rootstocks, creating a defensive mechanism that reduces the prevalence of pathogenic Agrobacterium. Crown gall disease, a destructive plant ailment caused by Agrobacterium, has long plagued agriculture, leading to significant crop losses. Traditional control methods have proven inadequate, highlighting an urgent need for innovative solutions. Given the pervasive impact of this disease and the limitations ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Understanding survival disparities in cancer care: A population-based study on mobility patterns

Common sleep aid may leave behind a dirty brain

Plant cells gain immune capabilities when it’s time to fight disease

Study sheds light on depression in community-dwelling older adults

Discovery of new class of particles could take quantum mechanics one step further

Cost-effectiveness of a polypill for cardiovascular disease prevention in an underserved population

Development and validation of a tool to predict onset of mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer dementia

New AI predicts inner workings of cells

Scientists uncover key step in how diazotrophs “fix” nitrogen

The hidden mechanics of earthquake ignition

Scientists leverage artificial intelligence to fast-track methane mitigation strategies in animal agriculture

Researchers unravel a novel mechanism regulating gene expression in the brain that could guide solutions to circadian and other disorders

Discovery of 'Punk' and 'Emo' fossils challenges our understanding of ancient molluscs

Exposure to aircraft noise linked to worse heart function

Deans of the University of Nottingham visited Korea University's College of Medicine

New study assesses wildfire risk from standing dead trees in Yellowstone National Park

A new approach for improving hot corrosion resistance and anti-oxidation performance in silicide coating on niobium alloys

UC San Diego to lead data hub of CDC-funded pandemic preparedness network

Biomimetic teakwood structured environmental barrier coating

Low-cost system will improve communications among industrial machines

Elderberry juice shows benefits for weight management, metabolic health

A new era in genetic engineering

Study identifies coastal black pine trees resistant to tsunamis and strong winds

From gender dysphoria to special skills: decoding the link

Study advances possible blood test for early-stage Alzheimer’s disease

New international research collaboration to develop and test an improved dietary supplement for pregnant women

Presenting a path forward for future genetically-modified pig heart transplants: lessons learned from second patient

When the past meets the future: Innovative drone mapping unlocks secrets of Bronze Age ‘mega fortress’ in the Caucasus

AI could improve the success of IVF treatment

Moving in sync, slowly, in glassy liquids

[Press-News.org] Understanding inequities in nurses’ moral distress during COVID-19
New research from Penn Nursing shows how poorer resources and communication in hospitals where Black patients predominantly access care impacts feelings of moral distress among nurses