Objective:
The objective of this literature review is to explore how depression and inflammatory conditions relate to gender among nurses working shifts.
Method:
relevant studies available on the PubMed database over the past decade were consulted. The main keywords were: “shift nurses”, “depression”, “gender Shift Nurses”, “Gender Role”, “shift nurse”, “gender roles”, "Inflammation” and then, free terms were combined with the Boole-an AND operator. Inclusion and exclusion criteria had been formerly identified and then, all the se-lected studies were assessed according to the following criteria, good description and appropriate-ness of: study design (objective and method), sample (sufficiently numerous, clarity of treatment al-location criteria, absence of important bias), intervention, outcomes, statistical analysis, clinical rele-vance.
Results:
61 titles concerning research on inflammation were found. 28 titles were not taken into ac-count as doubles whilst 33 were selected by title and abstract; in addition, 28 were discarded be-cause they were not relevant to the objective or because they did not meet the inclusion criteria. Out of the remaining 5, further 2 were also discarded upon a careful analysis of the whole text: they did not prove relevant to the research question. As for the research related to depression, the research strategy had highlighted 186 articles in the first place and then eliminated 165 of them either be-cause they were duplicates or on the grounds that they did not answer the research questions; 21 texts were thoroughly analyzed and, after a careful read, 4 studies were eventually incorporated in this review.
Conclusion:
Since data available in literature were inconsistent, it was difficult to establish that all depression conditions could be associated with an increase of inflammation and vice versa and that this condition was strictly connected to the female gender.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.