Abstract
BACKGROUND: No study has examined the stress level and coping strategies among critical care nurses in Saudi Arabia.
OBJECTIVES: Examine perceived stress and coping behaviors among nurses in intensive care units in Saudi Arabia, and the influence of coping mechanisms on stress.
DESIGN: Descriptive cross-sectional.
SETTING: Two tertiary training hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Nurses from cardiac, surgery and pediatric intensive care units responded to an online survey. Perceived Stress Scale-10 (PSS-10) and the Brief COPE Inventory were used as primary research tools. Multivariate methods were used to analyze the data.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Stress levels, coping strategies, and associated factors.
SAMPLE SIZE: 154 nurses.
RESULTS: The majority of the respondents reported a moderate level of stress in the past month (87.0%). Mean (SD) scores for nurses working in the cardiac ICU indicated significantly higher levels of stress compared to surgical ICU (18.18 [3.88-vs 6.17 [3.21], P=. 025). Belief in religion was the most common coping behavior while the use of substances was the lowest (mean scores [SD-6.70 [1.72-vs 2.22 [0.81-). In the multivariate analysis, behavioral disengagement (P=.016) and self-blame (P<.001) intensified the PSS-10 score, whereas acceptance (P=. 048) reduced the PSS-10 score.
CONCLUSION: The additional knowledge that behavioral disengagement and blaming aggravate stress can serve as the basis in formulating work-related stress reduction strategies among nurses caring for critical patients.
LIMITATIONS: The use of self-reports, convenience sampling, and selected demographic factors may have limited the scope and generalizability of the findings and induced social desirability bias.