Introduction At the bedside of every child fighting for a second chance after bone marrow transplantation (BMT), nurses carry the weight of hope, vigilance, and resilience that determine survival. Nurses serve as a vital link between doctors, families, and other healthcare team members to prevent complications after BMT. This multifaceted role often places nurses at the heart of the pediatric BMT journey. Nurses’ experiences post BMT include the unique professional and personal characteristics they develop through their daily work in intensive care. Their subjective perceptions, experiences, professional challenges, and achievements directly impact the quality of care provided and the effectiveness of interdisciplinary interaction during treatment. Aim This study explores the perception of nurses caring for pediatric patients after undergoing BMT at the University Medical Center in Astana, Kazakhstan. Design Exploratory qualitative research. Method A purposive sampling strategy was used to recruit 15 staff nurses who had provided direct care to pediatric post‐BMT patients at the University Medical Center, with inclusion criteria requiring at least six months of experience in the pediatric BMT unit. Semistructured, face‐to‐face interviews were conducted from February to April 2025 until data saturation was achieved. Interviews were audio‐recorded, transcribed verbatim, translated, and manually coded. An inductive thematic analysis was conducted to identify recurring patterns and themes. To ensure rigor and trustworthiness, credibility was enhanced through member checking and peer debriefing, while auditability was supported by maintaining detailed documentation and reflexive notes throughout the analytic process. Findings The thematic analysis identified four major themes: “Living with Constant Vigilance: The Emotional and Clinical Demand,” “Emotional Management in Caring,” “Professional Growth Through Shared Suffering,” and “Healing is a Team Effort: Integrating Families into Care.” Conclusion This study addresses the knowledge gap regarding Kazakh nurses’ perceptions in pediatric post‐BMT care, revealing the profound emotional, physical, and professional challenges they face. The findings demonstrate that implications include improving staffing ratios, implementing peer‐debriefing programs, providing resilience training, and strengthening family‐centered care with clear boundaries to enhance nurse well‐being and patient safety outcomes.
Trubacheva et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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