Hoffman, Heidi2025-08-142025-08-142025-08-12https://hdl.handle.net/10222/85326Registered nurses faced an unprecedented time while working during the COVID-19 pandemic. The purpose of this research was to explore the grief experience that registered nurses had during the COVID-19 pandemic following patient death. Eight participants were recruited using a purposive sampling strategy. Semi-structured interviews were used to understand this lived experience. Feminist poststructuralism and feminist poststructuralist discourse analysis was used to understand how nurses described and understood their lived experiences in a multitude of ways, influenced by social and institutional discourses. This research identified key themes in which registered nurses understand their own grief experience when patient death occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study provides evidence on how traditional grief models do not fully account for nurses’ social and political dimensions of their emotional experience.engriefregistered nursesfeminist poststructuralismEXPLORING THE GRIEF EXPERIENCES OF REGISTERED NURSES DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC FOLLOWING PATIENT DEATH USING FEMINIST POSTSTRUCTURALISM