Discussion:
Medical Workers & PTSD.
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a322x1n
2021-09-29 18:54:52 UTC
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<https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/claims-of-anti-vax-nurses-fueli
ng-hospital-staff-shortages-ignore-the-limited-support-and-lack-of-mental
-healthcare-for-covid-s-frontline-workers/ar-AAOXTB3?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U53
1>

<https://tinyurl.com/27pt48tm>

Claims of anti-vax nurses fueling hospital staff shortages ignore the
limited support and lack of mental healthcare for COVID's frontline
workers. ***@insider.com (Allana Akhtar), 1 hr ago.

Hospitals have told reporters unvaccinated workers are contributing to
the nurse staffing shortage. But research has found poor work
environments and PTSD contribute to whether a nurse will quit.
Traumatized nurses can also make decisions against their self interest,
like refusing a vaccine. See more stories on Insider's business page.
Sarah Chan, a registered nurse at St. Joseph's Hospital in New York, did
not expect the pandemic to plague hospitals for the last nineteen
months.

Chan said she believed the rollout of the vaccine would decrease the
number of COVID-19 patients she had. But as cases involving the delta
variant of COVID, which is more easily spread, rise and fewer people get
shots, hospitals are once again crowded.

Some health systems have blamed unvaccinated healthcare workers for
staffing shortages, but the problem with unvaccinated healthcare workers
may be overstated: the American Nurses Association found 9 in 10 nurses
have received a COVID-19 vaccine or are planning to.

Instead of leaving in protest of vaccine mandates, many of Chan's peers
left their jobs caring for patients due to exhaustion, she said. The
exodus of nurses has created staffing shortages at her hospital, which
means she is working overtime to care for sick patients.

Poor work environments and burnout are putting pressure on already
strained nurses - and without better resources, trauma and fatigue will
cause a nurse staffing crisis, experts told Insider.

"The stress of working in a COVID ICU, and all the death that I've had
to see, altogether, it has really set me back; I'm often very anxious,
and angry," Chan told Insider. "So much death weighs heavy on me."

I'm often very anxious, and angry...So much death weighs heavy on me.
Sarah Chan, an ICU nurse in New York Dr. Eileen Lake, a professor at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, has been researching the
impact nurses' work environments have on staffing for the last 20 years.
From her research, Lake has found poor work conditions - characterized
by hospitals that don't allow nurses to have a say in their practice,
disorganized work environments, and limited resources - leads to burnout
and job dissatisfaction.

"That decision to leave I believe reflects system factors that the nurse
evaluates and decides are no longer acceptable circumstances for me to
work," Lake said.

Her research and other data indicate that staffing shortages now reflect
a systemic problem in a hospital or health system that likely began
prior to COVID-19.

Nearly every state has no limit on the number of patients a nurse can
care for at once, leading many to care for too many people. A recent
study by University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing found New York
City hospitals - the epicenter of the pandemic back in April 2020 - were
understaffed as early as December 2019.

Nurses caring for COVID-19 patients may have PTSD
Along with poor work environments, post-traumatic stress disorder among
nurses who cared for COVID-19 patients may be fueling the staffing
crisis.

Chan, for instance, said the constant exposure to death has been
"gut-wrenching." She said she has tried to cope by emotionlessly go
through the motions at work, but the trauma has led to insomnia,
fatigue, short tempers, and an inability to focus.

Nearly 40% of 500 healthcare workers experienced symptoms of PTSD in a
longitudinal study launched last year, according to Dr. Debra Kaysen, a
professor of psychiatry at Stanford University developing strategies for
healthcare professionals to cope with treating COVID-19 patients.

In order to be diagnosed with PTSD, patients must be exposed to specific
kinds of environments and events, including threatened death, serious
injury, or sexual violence. The disorder can also stem from repeated
exposure to the adverse effects of a traumatic event, such as death from
COVID-19.

Healthcare workers that experience PTSD may have nightmares about the
event, avoid people and situations that remind them of trauma, and
experience strong emotions like shame, anger, or fear.

Untreated, PTSD in healthcare workers can lead to cardiovascular
diseases, as well as suicidal ideation and attempts, Kaysen said. She
said trauma among nurses could explain worker shortages health systems
are facing.

Kaysen added nurses who experience PTSD may stop trusting institutions,
due to feeling betrayed.

Major health systems across the country are blaming unvaccinated nurses
for staffing shortages Upstate University Hospital, the California
Hospital Association, and other health systems have begun to point
toward unvaccinated workers as the reason for staffing shortages, as
many states and private employers have enacted vaccine mandates for
healthcare workers. But New York State reported high vaccination rates
among hospital staff after its policy went into effect, and one provider
in North Carolina that dismissed unvaccinated staff still reported close
to 99% of employees had received their shots.

The COVID-19 vaccines have been proven to be safe and effective, so the
small number of nurses refusing to get vaccinated might be exhibiting a
trauma response, said Dr. Antiqua Smart, a board-certified family nurse
practitioner and professor at the University of Loyola-New Orleans.

Smart, who lost several family members to COVID herself, said many
non-clinicians forget nurses have to grapple with grief both inside and
outside the hospital. That grief, she added, may turn into anger and
resentment toward institutions, like those offering COVID-19 vaccines.

Kelley Reep, a registered nurse in North Carolina, said she and her
colleagues have grown angrier as the pandemic goes on. They "feel a
simmering rage that this is worse than ever and it did not have to be,"
Reep told Insider.

Smart said nurses refusing the vaccine might be a "type of retaliation,
or kind of an anger or coping mechanism part of just being burnt out
from seeing people die."

Read the original article on Business Insider.
BeamMeUpScotty
2021-09-29 19:46:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by a322x1n
<https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/claims-of-anti-vax-nurses-fueli
ng-hospital-staff-shortages-ignore-the-limited-support-and-lack-of-mental
-healthcare-for-covid-s-frontline-workers/ar-AAOXTB3?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U53
1>
<https://tinyurl.com/27pt48tm>
Claims of anti-vax nurses fueling hospital staff shortages ignore the
limited support and lack of mental healthcare for COVID's frontline
Hospitals have told reporters unvaccinated workers are contributing to
the nurse staffing shortage. But research has found poor work
environments and PTSD contribute to whether a nurse will quit.
Traumatized nurses can also make decisions against their self interest,
like refusing a vaccine. See more stories on Insider's business page.
Sarah Chan, a registered nurse at St. Joseph's Hospital in New York, did
not expect the pandemic to plague hospitals for the last nineteen
months.
Imagine a Million women each year getting abortions... they have a high
percentage of PTSD in the near term and most will have mental issues of
some kind farther down the road.....

Why won't Democrats place a moratorium on the wasted medical efforts of
abortions....
Post by a322x1n
Chan said she believed the rollout of the vaccine would decrease the
number of COVID-19 patients she had. But as cases involving the delta
variant of COVID, which is more easily spread, rise and fewer people get
shots, hospitals are once again crowded.
We all know that the VACCINE isn't stopping the spread or the making the
people getting it immune to the virus... the best solution seems to be
NATURAL IMMUNITY from contracting the virus and surviving it. SO maybe
the GOVERNMENT that pretends to be out DOCTOR should try to treat the
people with the virus to save them so they can become immune.
--
That's karma

You know there is a point when you're adding water to the soup, that you
no longer have soup you just have water...
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