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Insomnia and stress of physicians during COVID-19 outbreak
Author(s) -
Deldar Morad Abdulah,
Dildar H Musa
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
sleep medicine x
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.389
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 2590-1427
DOI - 10.1016/j.sleepx.2020.100017
Subject(s) - medicine , evening , insomnia , morning , outbreak , covid-19 , cross sectional study , obstetrics and gynaecology , pediatrics , emergency medicine , psychiatry , pregnancy , disease , physics , pathology , virology , astronomy , biology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , genetics
Background Healthcare workers are at high risk of developing sleep disorders during an outbreak. This study aimed to measure severity of sleep difficulty and its correlation with duration of deal with suspected/confirmed cases of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in physicians. Methods In this cross-sectional study, 268 physicians from different medical settings were included during the COVIS-19 outbreak. Results The mean age and experience of physicians were 35.06 (33-70 years) and 10.13 years. The median duration of dealing with suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19 was 1.0 (0-30 days). The mean sleep score and stress of physicians were 8.43 of 24.0 and 4.20 of 10, respectively. More than two-thirds of the physicians were sleepless (68.3%) and majority had stress (93.7%). The study did not find a significant difference in sleep score of physicians with different specialties (P=0.059). However, most physicians were sleepless; including anesthesia and intensive care (77.8%); general physicians (80.8%), and obstetrics and gynecology (80.0%). They were sleepless in morning (58.7%); evening (77.8%); night (100%); and multi-shift (70.9%). The physicians who dealt with suspected or confirmed cases of COVID-19 or with stress had more escalated sleep compared to those who did not deal with patients or without stress (9.39 vs. 7.17 and 8.78 vs. 2.69 P<0.001). The sleep of physicians was escalated with increasing stress (r=0.558; P<0.001) and a number of days that physicians dealt with suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19 (r=0.210; P=0.001), respectively. Conclusion The study confirmed that working with COVID-19 patients has a negative effect on the sleep of physicians.

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