Premium
Concerns and psychological well‐being of healthcare workers during the COVID ‐19 pandemic in a tertiary care hospital in New South Wales
Author(s) -
Naqvi Syeda Shaher Bano,
Davis Joshua,
Pickles Robert W.,
Loewenthal Mark R.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
internal medicine journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1445-5994
pISSN - 1444-0903
DOI - 10.1111/imj.15465
Subject(s) - pandemic , medicine , covid-19 , tertiary care , health care , betacoronavirus , family medicine , medical emergency , virology , economic growth , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty) , outbreak , economics
Background In early 2020, the impending COVID‐19 pandemic placed a once‐in‐a‐generation professional and personal challenge on healthcare workers. Publications on direct physical disease abound. The authors wanted to focus on doctors' psychological well‐being. Aims To assess the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on doctors' well‐being and evaluate their concerns as the pandemic progressed. Methods A mixed‐methods, hospital‐based survey was sent to doctors at the 650‐bed tertiary referral hospital in NSW at two different periods (late‐March and early May 2020). A validated mental well‐being tool (Short Warwick Edinburgh Mental Well‐being Scale (SWEMWBS)) was combined with COVID‐19‐specific questions. Results Two hundred and thirty‐five responses were obtained from 450 doctors, with a response rate of 32% in the first survey and 20% in the second. The majority (35%) of respondents were doctors‐in‐training, followed by staff‐specialists (23%). The highest response was from frontline workers in both surveys, including the intensive care unit (27%), anaesthesia (21%) and emergency department (13%). ‘Extreme concern’ regarding personal protective equipment (PPE) shortage dropped from 22.6% to 2.2% and ‘extreme concern’ of contracting COVID‐19 fell from 22.6% to 3.4% in the second survey. The proportion of respondents with a ‘low’ psychological well‐being score improved from 38% to 27% between the two surveys. The resulting mean improvement in the SWEMWBS was 3.49 (95% confidence interval = 3.06–3.91, P < 0.001). Conclusion Both COVID‐19 specific concerns and psychological well‐being improved greatly in the second survey. Possible explanations are the fall in COVID‐19 cases in the district, improvements in PPE supply and supportive measures communicated to doctors during this period.