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AnteayerJournal of Clinical Nursing

Emotional, mental health and physical symptom experience of patients hospitalized with COVID‐19 up to 3 months post‐hospitalization: A longitudinal study

Abstract

Aims and objectives

To explore emotional, mental health and physical symptoms up to 3 months after discharge for adults hospitalized with COVID-19.

Background

10%–30% of adults with COVID-19 experience physical and psychological symptoms 3 months or more following infection. Knowing symptoms can help direct early intervention.

Design

A longitudinal descriptive design to study COVID-related symptoms 2 weeks, 6 weeks and 3 months after hospitalization.

Methods

Sixty-six patients were recruited from a hospital system in Midwestern US (October 2020–May 2021). Participants self-reported demographics, hospital and post discharge symptoms, PROMIS measures (depression, anxiety, fatigue, cognitive function, satisfaction social roles, sleep disturbance) and Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R). Hospital length of stay, comorbidities, lowest oxygen saturation, respiratory support and resources used were collected. Descriptive and nonparametric statistics described the sample and identified correlations between variables. The STROBE checklist was used.

Results

Data from 1 (T1) and 3 months (T2) post discharge were analysed (N = 52). A majority were female, white and married; 96% experienced ≥1 COVID-related symptoms at T1; 85% at T2. Fatigue was most prevalent, followed by shortness of breath, muscle weakness and foggy thinking. More physical symptoms during hospitalization correlated positively with number of symptoms at T1 and T2; a majority stated these impacted their normal routine ‘somewhat’ or ‘a lot’. T1 depression highly correlated with all T2 PROMIS and IES-R scores and number of physical symptoms. More symptoms at T1 were associated with worse fatigue, lower cognitive function and lower satisfaction with social roles at T2.

Conclusion

This study adds to the growing knowledge of mental, physical and emotional symptoms and relationships between these early after hospitalization with COVID-19.

Relevance to clinical practice

Findings can help identify holistic nursing interventions to improve health and mitigate symptoms for people with long COVID.

Patient or public contribution

Patients contributed via study participation.

Investigation of social support as a mediator of the relationship between physical and psychological health among hospitalised patients

Abstract

Aim

To investigate the self-reported levels of social support from friends and family and from nurses as mediators of the relationship between self-rated physical and psychological condition in hospitalised patients.

Design

Cross-sectional study of adult inpatients at a large tertiary-care hospital in the northeast United States.

Methods

Multiple mediation analysis of survey data.

Results

In surveys received from 324 inpatients, one fourth of the variation in patients' self-rated psychological condition was explained by self-rated physical condition. Social support from family and friends mediated a significant proportion (11.0%) of the relationship between self-rated physical and psychological condition, however social support from nurses did not.

Conclusion

Social support from family and friends can positively influence the psychological health of inpatients, but nurses are not an adequate replacement for the social support provided by family and friends.

Implications for Nursing

Although nurses cannot replace the social support provided by family and friends, the assessment of social isolation and care planning of interventions to support patients is a fundamental nursing role. Technology to connect patients with friends and family should be used to mitigate isolation for hospitalised patients unable to receive in-person visits from loved ones.

Impact

The influence of social support from family and friends and nurses was addressed. The study found social support from family and friends, but not nurses, to influence the relationship between physical and psychological ratings. This finding has implications for the role of nurses in the hospital setting.

Reporting Method

Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines were followed.

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