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Kimberly Dimino
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Journal Articles
Kimberly Dimino, DNP, RN, CCRN-K, Amy E. Learmonth, PhD, Christiam C. Fajardo, MSN, RN, CCRN, NVRN-BC
Journal:
Critical Care Nurse
Critical Care Nurse (2021)
Published: 02 March 2021
Abstract
Background Stress among nurses is well documented, and in the midst of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, it has reached record highs. Problem Under normal conditions, nurse managers and frontline nurses face stressors that come with the territory of their profession, but the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has greatly added to their burden. Nurse managers are being called not only to help their organizations manage the crisis operationally, but also to help the nurses they supervise mentally, emotionally, and even ethically. Discussion This article provides recommendations for how nurse managers can use the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses Healthy Work Environment standards and make the experience of stress more productive. Conclusion Stress comes with the territory in nursing, but nurses can work together to make stress their ally and not their enemy. The real enemies are coronavirus disease 2019, burnout, and the aftermath of uncontrolled stress. When nurses keep stress in perspective and focus on what they can control, they contribute to developing healthier work environments.