Abstract

The South African health care system was hard hit by the second wave of Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), which affected nurse managers as healthcare facilities became overwhelmed due to an increased workload emanating from the overflow of admissions. Therefore, this study sought to explore and describe the nurse managers’ experiences during COVID-19 in order to identify gaps and lessons learnt. A descriptive phenomenological research approach was used to explore the experiences of ten nurse managers who were purposively selected from different units of a selected district hospital. Data was collected through telephonic unstructured individual interviews and analysed using Colaizzi’s seven steps method. The study revealed that nurse managers experienced human resource related challenges during COVID-19, worsened by the fact that vacant posts were frozen. It also emerged that there was a shortage of material resources that affected patient care. Nurse managers also indicated that COVID-19 brought a lot of administrative duties plus an additional duty of patient care. Also, nurse managers who had previously contracted COVID-19 experienced stigma and discrimination. The government needs to address resource related challenges in rural public hospitals and provide continuous support to nurse managers, particularly during a pandemic like COVID-19.

Highlights

  • This study used descriptive phenomenological research design to explore the experiences of nurse managers during the outbreak of COVID-19

  • All the study participants had more than six years of management experience, had been nurses for 10–40 years, received training on COVID-19 management and had been professionally trained as nurses

  • The findings of this study showed that the nurse managers experienced several challenges as they executed their duties during the COVID-19 pandemic

Read more

Summary

Introduction

World Health Organisation (WHO) COVID-19 dashboard, as of the 21st of December 2021, there were 274,628,461 million confirmed cases and 5,358,978 million deaths were reported globally [2]. 6,830,390 million cases and 154,538 deaths were from Africa [2]. At the end of May 2021, after (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak as a public health emergency of international concern, South Africa was one of the countries that was highly affected by COVID-19 in the African region [2,3]. According to Stats South Africa [4], South Africa reported the first case of COVID-19 on 5 March 2020 but has recorded

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call