How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic?
This study investigates the resilience-building process of health workers who experienced critical incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic, including family loss, personal infection, and social stigma. Specifically, the research addresses how these factors influence the psychological, emotional, and...
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Language: | English |
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Indonesian Institute for Counseling, Education and Therapy (IICET)
2024-11-01
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Series: | JPPI (Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan Indonesia) |
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Online Access: | https://jurnal.iicet.org/index.php/jppi/article/view/4687 |
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author | Nungky Taniasar Seger Handoyo Fendy Suhariadi Fiona Niska Dinda Nadia |
author_facet | Nungky Taniasar Seger Handoyo Fendy Suhariadi Fiona Niska Dinda Nadia |
author_sort | Nungky Taniasar |
collection | DOAJ |
description | This study investigates the resilience-building process of health workers who experienced critical incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic, including family loss, personal infection, and social stigma. Specifically, the research addresses how these factors influence the psychological, emotional, and behavioral resilience of healthcare workers. Using a qualitative method with a Critical Incident Technique design, the study involved in-depth interviews with 12 health workers, including nurses and medical professionals, who met the criteria of having lost a spouse or parent to COVID-19, endured moderate to severe infection, or faced negative community stigma. The interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify key themes and resilience factors. Findings reveal that social support, emotional regulation, self-efficacy, and spirituality played significant roles in resilience-building. Affective responses, such as a sense of security from social support and optimism, cognitive responses like positive thinking and acceptance, and behavioral capacities, including increased worship and professionalism, were prominent. The research also highlights that these resilience processes led to positive adaptation and post-traumatic growth, with 33% of participants reporting a more positive outlook on life and 66% exhibiting increased patience and gratitude. These findings suggest that resilience in healthcare workers is shaped by a complex interplay of emotional, cognitive, and behavioral factors, with implications for policy development and mental health support for healthcare professionals. |
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-4bf56aaef3a04ca58c989815585eb70e |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 2477-8524 2502-8103 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2024-11-01 |
publisher | Indonesian Institute for Counseling, Education and Therapy (IICET) |
record_format | Article |
series | JPPI (Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan Indonesia) |
spelling | doaj-art-4bf56aaef3a04ca58c989815585eb70e2025-01-27T12:46:14ZengIndonesian Institute for Counseling, Education and Therapy (IICET)JPPI (Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan Indonesia)2477-85242502-81032024-11-0110440842010.29210/0202446872357How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic?Nungky Taniasar0Seger Handoyo1Fendy Suhariadi2Fiona Niska Dinda Nadia3Universitas AirlanggaUniversitas AirlanggaUniversitas AirlanggaUniversitas AirlanggaThis study investigates the resilience-building process of health workers who experienced critical incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic, including family loss, personal infection, and social stigma. Specifically, the research addresses how these factors influence the psychological, emotional, and behavioral resilience of healthcare workers. Using a qualitative method with a Critical Incident Technique design, the study involved in-depth interviews with 12 health workers, including nurses and medical professionals, who met the criteria of having lost a spouse or parent to COVID-19, endured moderate to severe infection, or faced negative community stigma. The interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify key themes and resilience factors. Findings reveal that social support, emotional regulation, self-efficacy, and spirituality played significant roles in resilience-building. Affective responses, such as a sense of security from social support and optimism, cognitive responses like positive thinking and acceptance, and behavioral capacities, including increased worship and professionalism, were prominent. The research also highlights that these resilience processes led to positive adaptation and post-traumatic growth, with 33% of participants reporting a more positive outlook on life and 66% exhibiting increased patience and gratitude. These findings suggest that resilience in healthcare workers is shaped by a complex interplay of emotional, cognitive, and behavioral factors, with implications for policy development and mental health support for healthcare professionals.https://jurnal.iicet.org/index.php/jppi/article/view/4687resilience of healthcare workers, critical incidents |
spellingShingle | Nungky Taniasar Seger Handoyo Fendy Suhariadi Fiona Niska Dinda Nadia How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? JPPI (Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan Indonesia) resilience of healthcare workers, critical incidents |
title | How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? |
title_full | How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? |
title_fullStr | How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? |
title_full_unstemmed | How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? |
title_short | How do health workers build resilience after family loss, covid-19 infection, and social stigma during the pandemic? |
title_sort | how do health workers build resilience after family loss covid 19 infection and social stigma during the pandemic |
topic | resilience of healthcare workers, critical incidents |
url | https://jurnal.iicet.org/index.php/jppi/article/view/4687 |
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