参与COVID-19护理的卫生保健工作者的抑郁、焦虑、失眠和痛苦

Muthuvenkatachalam Srinivasan, KamleshKumari Sharma, Siddarth Sarkar, Ravneet Kaur, Yamya Sharma, Latha Venkatesan, Sandhya Gupta, Ambili Venugopal
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景和目的:卫生保健专业人员一直站在应对COVID-19大流行的最前沿。然而,与COVID-19患者打交道的压力以及对自身健康的担忧可能会导致他们的心理困扰。这项研究调查了在一家三级医疗机构从事COVID-19服务的医生和护士的抑郁、焦虑、失眠和严重痛苦。方法:使用在线表格,分别通过初级健康问卷-9、广泛性焦虑障碍-7量表、失眠严重程度指数(ISI)和事件影响量表(修订)评估抑郁、焦虑、失眠和显著痛苦。结果:共有504名参与者提供了完整的回复,其中女性53.2%,护士70.8%。抑郁、焦虑、失眠和高于阈值的痛苦症状分别出现在36.7%、29.6%、31.9%和11.7%的参与者中。单身婚姻状况、缺乏适当的个人防护装备、工作距离超过10公里以及被诊断患有精神疾病是抑郁症的独立预测因素。缺乏适当的个人防护用品和被诊断患有精神疾病是焦虑的独立预测因素。缺乏足够的个人防护装备分别成为失眠和显著痛苦症状的唯一独立预测因素。结论:在COVID-19护理中,相当比例的卫生保健专业人员存在心理困扰症状。解决保健专业人员关注的问题很重要,可能需要精神保健专业人员和管理人员的有效合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Depression, anxiety, insomnia, and distress among health-care workers posted in COVID-19 care
Background and Aims: Health-care professionals have been at the forefront of facing the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the stresses of dealing with patients affected by COVID-19 and concern about their own well-being are likely to lead to psychological distress among them. This study looked at depression, anxiety, insomnia, and significant distress among doctors and nurses working in COVID-19 services at a tertiary care facility. Methods: Depression, anxiety, insomnia, and significant distress were assessed through Primary Health Questionnaire-9, generalized anxiety disorder-7 scale, insomnia severity index (ISI), and impact of events scale-revised, respectively, using an online pro forma. Results: A total of 504 participants (53.2% females, 70.8% nurses) provided complete responses. Depression, anxiety, insomnia, and distress symptoms above the threshold were present in 36.7%, 29.6%, 31.9%, and 11.7% of participants, respectively. Single marital status, lack of access to appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE), distance to work more than 10 km, and being diagnosed with a mental illness were independent predictors of depression. Lack of access to appropriate PPE and being diagnosed with a mental illness were independent predictors of anxiety. Lack of access to adequate PPE emerged as the only independent predictor of insomnia and significant distress symptoms, respectively. Conclusion: Considerable proportion of health-care professionals posted in COVID-19 care had symptoms of psychological distress. Addressing the concerns of health-care professionals is important and probably needs effective collaboration of mental health-care professionals and administrators.
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