Ethical problems experienced by nurse managers in the pandemic of COVID-19 in a university hospital

Simone Graziele Silva Cunha, Sérgio Deodato, Maria José Menezes Brito

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Abstract

Objective: to understand the ethical problems experienced by nurse managers in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: qualitative study, conducted with 19 nurse managers. The inclusion criteria were nurses who had held a management position for at least six months, and the exclusion criteria were those who held an assistance position. Data were collected through individual interviews with a semi-structured script and document analysis and analyzed using Content Analysis. Results: the ethical problems were related to duplicity and lack of information about norms and routines; lack of patient flow; routine changes without communication with the nurse coordinators; absenteeism and presenteeism of the nursing team; refusal of reassignment by technicians; nursing professionals who chose to work in the COVID-19 sector and earn additional unhealthy salary and those who did not choose due to fear of disease; and conflicts arising from the patient. Conclusion: the analysis revealed situations marked by ethical problems that compromise the dynamics of work and the quality of care. Contributions to practice: understanding ethical problems contributes to the promotion of improvements in planning, intervention, and preparation of professionals to deal with conflicting issues experienced in hospital management.
Translated title of the contributionProblemas éticos vivenciados por enfermeiros gestores na pandemia da COVID-19 em um hospital universitário
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere81737
Number of pages12
JournalRev Rene
Volume24
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • Nursing
  • Health management
  • Ethics, nursing
  • COVID-19
  • Coronavirus infections

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