Fall Research Expo 2021

Toll of COVID-19 Critical Care on ICU Nursing Staff

Intensive Care Units (ICUs) require the utmost endurance and adaptability from medical providers to continuously care for high-acuity patients. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, I used FDA-approved Biofourmis Everion biosensors to collect physiological measures of stress from Registered Nurses (RNs) in local ICUs. These included skin temperature, galvanic skin response, blood pulse wave, energy expenditure, heart rate, and respiratory rate. Not only did I apply and monitor the sensors on participants, but also surveyed the cohorts for psychological strain and overall well-being using NASA Task Loading Index questionaries. The pandemic unfortunately prevented me from continuing to personally collect this data and led me to conduct the remainder of the project remotely. With the collaboration of my PI, Dr. Krzysztof Laudanski, we were able to obtain physiological and psychological measures of stress from RNs who worked 12-hour shifts in COVID-19 units and compare this to those who were assigned standard critical care patients.

The pandemic clearly presents a uniquely challenging environment for healthcare workers as they are faced with complex treatments, novel PPE protocols, and the infectiousness of the virus. Our results reflect that the burden ICU nursing staff face as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic is both physiological and psychological in nature. These nurses self-reported elevated effort in COVID-19-specific units, which is consistent with the increased energy expenditure measured via the biosensors. Similarly, they experienced more stress-inducing stimuli as demonstrated by increases in phasic galvanic skin response and higher self-reporting of mental demand/strain. Identifying and quantifying this burden is crucial in determining how to alleviate stress for medical providers going forward. I intend to continue researching the dynamics of critical care units in hopes of improving the well-being of healthcare workers and maintaining quality of patient care regardless of unprecedented challenges.

PRESENTED BY
College Alumni Society Undergraduate Research Grant
Advised By
Krzysztof Laudanski
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care
PRESENTED BY
College Alumni Society Undergraduate Research Grant
Advised By
Krzysztof Laudanski
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care

Comments

This was so amazing, and heartbreaking, to read. My mother is an ER doctor who has been working with COVID patients since the beginning of the pandemic. Though she isn't a nurse, she bears much of the emotional burden of the constant traumatization and helplessness caused by COVID. Thank you so much for contributing to what I know will be an extensive body of research on the emotional toll of COVID. Documenting the trauma of this pandemic is a vital step towards recovery, healing, and conquering the disease. Great work. 

We are constantly talking about the death toll and numbers of cases each day, but rarely do we stop to think about how the situation is affecting those who care for us during this incredibly difficult health battle. Great work- really valuable information.