Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study

Introduction Nurses working in intensive care settings are required to maintain constant vigilance, yet they often experience high stress and burnout, which can compromise the quality of patient care.Objectives To identify stress and burnout among intensive care nurses, contributing risk factors and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Manju Mathew, Anjum John, Reshma Vazhakkalayil Ramachandran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-05-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/14/2/e003109.full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849322384518021120
author Manju Mathew
Anjum John
Reshma Vazhakkalayil Ramachandran
author_facet Manju Mathew
Anjum John
Reshma Vazhakkalayil Ramachandran
author_sort Manju Mathew
collection DOAJ
description Introduction Nurses working in intensive care settings are required to maintain constant vigilance, yet they often experience high stress and burnout, which can compromise the quality of patient care.Objectives To identify stress and burnout among intensive care nurses, contributing risk factors and impact on patient safety, while providing an opportunity for nurses to discuss their work-related challenges.Methods Setting: Observational mixed-methods study done in intensive care unit (ICU), tertiary teaching hospital, Kerala, India in July 2024.Participants: Thirty nurses in the ICU (all females, mostly aged 25–35 years, >5 years of work experience) completed standardised questionnaires on stress levels, workload, burnout and work satisfaction. From this group, six nurses underwent structured interviews. Purposive sampling was done to capture diverse experience and roles. Reported patient safety incident data were collected.Severity of stress, workload, burnout and work satisfaction were classified into high or low levels based on predefined cut-off scores.Results 86.7% reported moderate to high levels of combined outcomes of workload, stress or burnout, with 46.7% experiencing high levels of stress. Four major themes were identified in the qualitative analysis: stress, attitudes, patient safety and nurses’ unmet demands and aspirations. Positive attitudes identified were passion, motivation and empathy. Key stressors included work overload, inadequate staffing, logistics, team and management support. Coping strategy was family-centred. A perceived need for a non-punitive, learning-oriented environment was identified for fostering patient safety culture. Nurses’ demands included facility safety, managerial support and better resources, both man and machine.Conclusions Despite the specific challenges faced by ICU nurses in developing countries, they upheld positive values. Institutional leadership’s commitment to implement patient safety culture and improve nurses’ work environment is important. Future research should involve larger multicentre interventional studies.
format Article
id doaj-art-bbfca34121b5406c8247334d85440c70
institution Kabale University
issn 2399-6641
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Open Quality
spelling doaj-art-bbfca34121b5406c8247334d85440c702025-08-20T03:49:22ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412025-05-0114210.1136/bmjoq-2024-003109Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods studyManju Mathew0Anjum John1Reshma Vazhakkalayil Ramachandran2Pulmonology and Critical Care, Pushpagiri Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre, Thiruvalla, IndiaCommunity Medicine, Pushpagiri Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre, Thiruvalla, IndiaPushpagiri Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre, Thiruvalla, IndiaIntroduction Nurses working in intensive care settings are required to maintain constant vigilance, yet they often experience high stress and burnout, which can compromise the quality of patient care.Objectives To identify stress and burnout among intensive care nurses, contributing risk factors and impact on patient safety, while providing an opportunity for nurses to discuss their work-related challenges.Methods Setting: Observational mixed-methods study done in intensive care unit (ICU), tertiary teaching hospital, Kerala, India in July 2024.Participants: Thirty nurses in the ICU (all females, mostly aged 25–35 years, >5 years of work experience) completed standardised questionnaires on stress levels, workload, burnout and work satisfaction. From this group, six nurses underwent structured interviews. Purposive sampling was done to capture diverse experience and roles. Reported patient safety incident data were collected.Severity of stress, workload, burnout and work satisfaction were classified into high or low levels based on predefined cut-off scores.Results 86.7% reported moderate to high levels of combined outcomes of workload, stress or burnout, with 46.7% experiencing high levels of stress. Four major themes were identified in the qualitative analysis: stress, attitudes, patient safety and nurses’ unmet demands and aspirations. Positive attitudes identified were passion, motivation and empathy. Key stressors included work overload, inadequate staffing, logistics, team and management support. Coping strategy was family-centred. A perceived need for a non-punitive, learning-oriented environment was identified for fostering patient safety culture. Nurses’ demands included facility safety, managerial support and better resources, both man and machine.Conclusions Despite the specific challenges faced by ICU nurses in developing countries, they upheld positive values. Institutional leadership’s commitment to implement patient safety culture and improve nurses’ work environment is important. Future research should involve larger multicentre interventional studies.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/14/2/e003109.full
spellingShingle Manju Mathew
Anjum John
Reshma Vazhakkalayil Ramachandran
Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
BMJ Open Quality
title Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
title_full Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
title_fullStr Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
title_full_unstemmed Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
title_short Nurse stress and patient safety in the ICU: physician-led observational mixed-methods study
title_sort nurse stress and patient safety in the icu physician led observational mixed methods study
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/14/2/e003109.full
work_keys_str_mv AT manjumathew nursestressandpatientsafetyintheicuphysicianledobservationalmixedmethodsstudy
AT anjumjohn nursestressandpatientsafetyintheicuphysicianledobservationalmixedmethodsstudy
AT reshmavazhakkalayilramachandran nursestressandpatientsafetyintheicuphysicianledobservationalmixedmethodsstudy