» Articles » PMID: 35875015

The Wounded Healer: A Phenomenological Study on Hospital Nurses Who Contracted COVID-19

Overview
Specialty Public Health
Date 2022 Jul 25
PMID 35875015
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Since the pandemic began nurses were at the forefront of the crisis, assisting countless COVID-19 patients, facing unpreparedness, social and family isolation, and lack of protective equipment. Of all health professionals, nurses were those most frequently infected. Research on healthcare professionals' experience of the pandemic and how it may have influenced their life and work is sparse. No study has focused on the experiences of nurses who contracted COVID-19 and afterwards returned to caring for patients with COVID-19. The purpose of this study was therefore to explore the lived personal and professional experiences of such nurses, and to describe the impact it had on their ways of approaching patients, caring for them, and practicing their profession. A phenomenological study was conducted with 54 nurses, through 20 individual interviews and 4 focus groups. The main finding is that the nurses who contracted COVID-19 became "wounded healers": they survived and recovered, but remained "wounded" by the experience, and returned to caring for patients as "healers," with increased compassion and attention to basic needs. Through this life-changing experience they strengthened their ability to build therapeutic relationships with patients and re-discovered fundamental values of nursing. These are some of the ways in which nurses can express most profoundly the ethics of work done well.

Citing Articles

A Uniform for Narrating the Nurse in the Wheel of Time: An Interpretative Phenomenological Study.

Fiorini J, Marchetti A, Infante A, Piredda M, Sili A Nurs Open. 2025; 12(3):e70166.

PMID: 40009711 PMC: 11864350. DOI: 10.1002/nop2.70166.


Wounded healer nurses: a qualitative content analysis of the positive traits of nurses affected by chronic cardiovascular disease.

Nabi Foodani M, Zakerimoghadam M, Ghiyasvandian S, Abbasi Dolatabadi Z BMC Nurs. 2024; 23(1):465.

PMID: 38982424 PMC: 11232157. DOI: 10.1186/s12912-024-02124-3.


Chain mediations of perceived social support and emotional regulation efficacy between role stress and compassion fatigue: insights from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Zhang Y, He H, Yang C, Wang X, Luo J, Xiao J Front Public Health. 2023; 11:1269594.

PMID: 38026273 PMC: 10680973. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1269594.


The evolution of research on depression during COVID-19: A visual analysis using Co-Occurrence and VOSviewer.

Fu Q, Ge J, Xu Y, Liang X, Yu Y, Shen S Front Public Health. 2022; 10:1061486.

PMID: 36561872 PMC: 9764011. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.1061486.


The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on job satisfaction among professionally active nurses in five European countries.

Makowicz D, Lisowicz K, Bryniarski K, Dziubaszewska R, Makowicz N, Dobrowolska B Front Public Health. 2022; 10:1006049.

PMID: 36249191 PMC: 9554252. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.1006049.

References
1.
Delmar C . The excesses of care: a matter of understanding the asymmetry of power. Nurs Philos. 2012; 13(4):236-43. DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-769X.2012.00537.x. View

2.
Prenkert M, Carlsson E, Svantesson M, Anderzen-Carlsson A . Healthcare-professional patients' conceptions of being ill and hospitalised - a phenomenographic study. J Clin Nurs. 2016; 26(11-12):1725-1736. DOI: 10.1111/jocn.13604. View

3.
Corso V . Oncology nurse as wounded healer: developing a compassion identity. Clin J Oncol Nurs. 2012; 16(5):448-50. DOI: 10.1188/12.CJON.448-450. View

4.
Jorgensen L, Pedersen B, Lerbaek B, Haslund-Thomsen H, Thorup C, Albrechtsen M . Nursing care during COVID-19 at non-COVID-19 hospital units: A qualitative study. Nord J Nurs Res. 2022; 42(2):101-108. PMC: 9204132. DOI: 10.1177/20571585211047429. View

5.
Rodriguez A, Smith J . Phenomenology as a healthcare research method. Evid Based Nurs. 2018; 21(4):96-98. DOI: 10.1136/eb-2018-102990. View