Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites
Nurses are already exposed to plenty of stressors while at work, one of which being the unavoidable nature of rotating shift work scheduling which can have profound physiological effects carrying heightened long-term health risks. Working on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic has introduced...
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ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-132572021-08-17T17:28:13Z Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites Harrington, Marisa Wolski, Lynneth Ann nurse nurses covid-19 pandemic hospital coronavirus stress physiology endocrine heart rate variability autonomic cortisol melatonin interleukin 6 il-6 occupational victoria heart enss expanded nurses stress scale polar salimetrics circadian Nurses are already exposed to plenty of stressors while at work, one of which being the unavoidable nature of rotating shift work scheduling which can have profound physiological effects carrying heightened long-term health risks. Working on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic has introduced new stressors while further exacerbating the effects of pre-existing ones in this already understudied group of essential workers. The purpose of this research was to examine physiological markers of stress and health in nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nine subjects (mean age 32.11 ± 7.25 years) from two hospitals in the Greater Victoria region collected data over an eight-day shift roster consisting of two 12-hour day shifts, two 12-hour night shifts, and four days off in two separate collection periods; remote data collection was used to adhere to COVID-19 safety guidelines. Salimetrics ELISA kits were used to conduct analyses for salivary cortisol, melatonin, and interleukin-6 (IL-6) content. Frequency domain heart rate variability (HRV) was collected with a Polar H10 Chest Strap and Polar Ignite Activity Tracker. A salivary sample and 5-minute HRV recording were obtained upon waking or shortly thereafter on each day; a second saliva sample was obtained after work for the four working days. The Expanded Nursing Stress Scale (ENSS) was completed at the end of the last night shift in each period. There were no significant differences between IL-6 concentrations across the eight days within each period; the same was observed for cortisol. Additionally, no difference was apparent between the morning and evening salivary cortisol concentrations, thus demonstrating a blunting of the diurnal release pattern. Evening salivary cortisol concentrations remained elevated near the level of morning samples and were consistently above reference values for the population age group. Morning salivary melatonin concentrations significantly differed by day (F(5, 25) = 6.626, p < 0.001) but not period; melatonin concentrations were lowest following night shifts, showing a suppression in release due to participants being exposed to light at night with shift work. No statistically significant differences were apparent between any frequency domain HRV parameters in either Period 1 or Period 2. Perceived occupational stress was heightened in comparison to previously published pre-pandemic research using the ENSS. The results of this research reveal alterations to the circadian nature of cortisol and melatonin alongside elevated perceived occupational stress; these physiological and psychological effects can compound the risk for adverse health outcomes. While it is difficult to discern the root cause of these responses, it nevertheless reveals insight into the effects of nurses working during the COVID-19 pandemic and raises concern for potentially related disease risk. Graduate 2021-08-16T22:09:29Z 2021-08-16T22:09:29Z 2021 2021-08-16 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13257 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf |
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NDLTD |
language |
English en |
format |
Others
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sources |
NDLTD |
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nurse nurses covid-19 pandemic hospital coronavirus stress physiology endocrine heart rate variability autonomic cortisol melatonin interleukin 6 il-6 occupational victoria heart enss expanded nurses stress scale polar salimetrics circadian |
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nurse nurses covid-19 pandemic hospital coronavirus stress physiology endocrine heart rate variability autonomic cortisol melatonin interleukin 6 il-6 occupational victoria heart enss expanded nurses stress scale polar salimetrics circadian Harrington, Marisa Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
description |
Nurses are already exposed to plenty of stressors while at work, one of which
being the unavoidable nature of rotating shift work scheduling which can have profound
physiological effects carrying heightened long-term health risks. Working on the
frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic has introduced new stressors while further
exacerbating the effects of pre-existing ones in this already understudied group of
essential workers. The purpose of this research was to examine physiological markers of
stress and health in nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nine subjects (mean age
32.11 ± 7.25 years) from two hospitals in the Greater Victoria region collected data over
an eight-day shift roster consisting of two 12-hour day shifts, two 12-hour night shifts,
and four days off in two separate collection periods; remote data collection was used to
adhere to COVID-19 safety guidelines. Salimetrics ELISA kits were used to conduct
analyses for salivary cortisol, melatonin, and interleukin-6 (IL-6) content. Frequency
domain heart rate variability (HRV) was collected with a Polar H10 Chest Strap and
Polar Ignite Activity Tracker. A salivary sample and 5-minute HRV recording were
obtained upon waking or shortly thereafter on each day; a second saliva sample was
obtained after work for the four working days. The Expanded Nursing Stress Scale
(ENSS) was completed at the end of the last night shift in each period. There were no
significant differences between IL-6 concentrations across the eight days within each period; the same was observed for cortisol. Additionally, no difference was apparent
between the morning and evening salivary cortisol concentrations, thus demonstrating a
blunting of the diurnal release pattern. Evening salivary cortisol concentrations remained
elevated near the level of morning samples and were consistently above reference values
for the population age group. Morning salivary melatonin concentrations significantly
differed by day (F(5, 25) = 6.626, p < 0.001) but not period; melatonin concentrations
were lowest following night shifts, showing a suppression in release due to participants
being exposed to light at night with shift work. No statistically significant differences
were apparent between any frequency domain HRV parameters in either Period 1 or
Period 2. Perceived occupational stress was heightened in comparison to previously
published pre-pandemic research using the ENSS. The results of this research reveal
alterations to the circadian nature of cortisol and melatonin alongside elevated perceived
occupational stress; these physiological and psychological effects can compound the risk
for adverse health outcomes. While it is difficult to discern the root cause of these
responses, it nevertheless reveals insight into the effects of nurses working during the
COVID-19 pandemic and raises concern for potentially related disease risk. === Graduate |
author2 |
Wolski, Lynneth Ann |
author_facet |
Wolski, Lynneth Ann Harrington, Marisa |
author |
Harrington, Marisa |
author_sort |
Harrington, Marisa |
title |
Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
title_short |
Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
title_full |
Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
title_fullStr |
Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
title_full_unstemmed |
Examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Greater Victoria care sites |
title_sort |
examination of healthcare workers’ response to rotating shift work during the covid-19 pandemic in greater victoria care sites |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1828/13257 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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