“We started to care for our colleagues”: A qualitative study of statements by physicians and nurses from a COVID-19 ICU of a public university hospital in the Southeast region of Brazil
Felipe Santos da Silva, Luciane Miranda Guerra, Lucas Serra Valladão, Carla Fabiana Casagrande, Jasmine de Matos Cavalcante, Paula Elias Ortolan, Diego Romaioli, Milena Rossi Suedt, Egberto Ribeiro Turato

TL;DR
This study explores the emotional and psychological experiences of physicians and nurses in a Brazilian hospital's COVID-19 ICU through their personal statements.
Contribution
The study introduces a humanistic approach using Clinical-Qualitative Method to interpret symbolic meanings in healthcare workers' pandemic experiences.
Findings
Interviewees showed rudimentary symbolization of pandemic experiences, indicating challenges in processing intense events.
Discursive speech patterns revealed poor symbolic expression, highlighting the need for time to process psychic and cultural representations.
Themes of denial, tension, family support, and insecurity emerged as key psychological and psychosocial responses.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic triggered countless intense emotional experiences. The challenges posed by the unpredictability of this macro-phenomenon led to a “mass illness”, with impacts on mental health, particularly among healthcare providers, who worked directly with hospitalized patients, tirelessly seeking their recovery. This study aimed to interpret the symbolic meanings of statements expressed by physicians and nurses of a COVID-19 intensive care unit to assess their care experiences. This was a humanistic study using the Clinical-Qualitative method (CQM). Data were interpreted using Clinical-Qualitative Content Analysis. Six interviews were performed, which produced the following categories: Category 1 –Psychic time and rudimentary symbolizations on personal experience during the pandemic; Category 2 –Denial as a psychological defense or a psychosocial adaptation mechanism? Category…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units · Health, Nursing, Elderly Care
