Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Rx for mental health

Resilience is key, RN and CMHA specialist advises

- REBECCA WRIGHT

While the pandemic has had many negative effects on nurses' health and well-being, it's also paved the way for necessary conversati­ons about mental health stress management, according to a local mental health profession­al.

“It has normalized discussion­s of anxiety and depression and helped health care providers reach out for supports from their employee assistant programs or other community resources to find the help they maybe even needed before the pandemic,” says Margo Cameron, clinical practice specialist at Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n (CMHA) Windsor-essex County Branch. “I think the pandemic has shown us the limits of our physical, mental and emotional capacities and that it is important to pay attention to what we each need to do to manage adversity.”

Cameron, a registered nurse herself, has worked in hospital and community settings since 1986 in Detroit, Windsor, Edmonton and the GTA. She has been in her current position at CMHA since 2018.

She says the pandemic has nurses running on fumes, with no chance to pause and find restoratio­n or renewal.

“Everyone's reserves of adrenaline and resilience are tapped out,” she describes.

But even pre-pandemic, nursing has always been an extremely demanding and stressful profession, she notes. It's a career defined by long hours, heavy workloads in short-staffed environmen­ts, fiscal restraints that affect supplies and services for clients, physical and mental exhaustion, vicarious trauma, burnout, moral distress, moral injury, post-traumatic stress and more.

These are realities nurses have always faced that have only been exacerbate­d during the pandemic, she says.

“Nurses are altruistic and empathetic profession­als who will often put the needs of patients and clients before their own, missing breaks and meals to ensure essential care is completed,” Cameron says. “Like many helping profession­s, individual­s who pursue nursing do so out of a desire to care for others and improve the health and quality of peoples' lives.”

There are many things that nurses deal with on a regular basis that could affect their mental health, Cameron points out — things like dealing with crises and emergencie­s, sudden or unexpected death, palliative care and slow deaths.

Clients who do not improve or who cannot return home or go to rehab, or clients who need longterm care but are not ready to accept it, can also be very stressful to deal with, she says.

Nurses also have to often manage family misunderst­andings, conflicts within families or conflicts with families and other allied health care providers.

And clients and families who have unrealisti­c expectatio­ns and do not understand how the health care system works is also an issue.

“Nurses can also be exposed to verbal and physical violence, harassment and intimidati­on with clients and unfortunat­ely sometimes with colleagues,”

Cameron adds.

While nursing education does provide some guidance and preparatio­n for nurses to anticipate that their jobs will be stressful, this education is an achievemen­t that requires strength and resilience to complete, according to Cameron.

“This lays the foundation for what's required to practise the profession, but the competing priorities and challenges with which nurses are confronted may make it difficult to sustain and develop resilience long-term,” she says.

To face adverse situations, stay focused and continue to be optimistic for the future, nurses need education about resilience building, support of colleagues and health care leadership and recognitio­n, Cameron states.

“Research shows that investment in nurses' resilience reaps dividends for both nurses and patients because it enhances client safety, quality of client care and the experience of individual­s through the health care system,” she says.

Nurses are educated health care providers who seek to serve the public to the best of their ability to consistent­ly ensure safe and evidence-based care, even in environmen­ts where work volume is overwhelmi­ng, supplies are limited or staffing is short due to fiscal restraints, says Cameron.

“Nursing is a profession that requires lifelong learning to continuall­y recalibrat­e nursing practice with the latest research, best practice guidance and regulatory expectatio­ns,” she adds.

 ?? ?? Margo Cameron, RN
Margo Cameron, RN
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GETTY IMAGES

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