加拿大长期住宿护理人员关于流行病防范和劳动力心理健康的建议

Q2 Health Professions
Nick Boettcher, Sofia Celis, Bonnie Lashewicz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:2019冠状病毒病大流行对加拿大长期寄宿护理(LTRC)行业的影响表明,未来的大流行防范不仅需要恢复,还需要对长期存在的脆弱性进行更深层次的行业转型。改善劳动力的心理健康和复原力是这些变革努力的核心。目的:本研究对LTRC员工对大流行防范和员工心理健康的建议进行内容分析。方法:对来自12个组织的50名LTRC工作人员进行半结构化访谈,收集定性数据。这些访谈旨在深入了解在Covid-19大流行的第一波中如何支持工人的心理健康。与会者对寻求对未来大流行病防范提出建议的问题的答复被提取出来,并使用定性内容分析进行了分析。研究结果:我们的研究结果包括员工建议,分为7类:1)风险降低和补偿,2)人员重新评估,3)救济机会,4)倾听空间,5)改善沟通,6)培养响应型领导,7)重新定义公共责任。局限性:数据主要依赖于对加拿大西部LTRC工人的采访。影响:建议位于现有的工人心理健康和人员配备政策和研究范围内。我们讨论了支持和倾听ltc工作者如何加强大流行防范、劳动力心理健康和提供高质量的以人为本的护理。我们认为,在知识产生和政策制定过程中,工人的声音越来越多,这对于实现低碳经济所需的部门转型至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Canadian Long-Term Residential Care Staff Recommendations for Pandemic Preparedness and Workforce Mental Health
Context: The impacts of Covid-19 pandemic conditions in Canada’s long-term residential care (LTRC) sector have demonstrated that future pandemic preparedness necessitates not only recovery but deeper sectoral transformation of longstanding vulnerabilities. Improving workforce mental health and resilience is central to these transformative efforts. Objective: This study presents a content analysis of staff recommendations for pandemic preparedness and employee mental health in LTRC. Methods: Qualitative data were gathered through semi-structured interviews conducted with 50 LTRC staff members from 12 organizations. The interviews aimed to gain insights into supporting worker mental health in the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. Participant responses to a question seeking recommendations for future pandemic preparedness were extracted and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Findings: Our findings encompass staff recommendations organized into seven categories: 1) Risk reduction and compensation, 2) Staffing reappraisal, 3) Opportunities for relief, 4) Spaces to be heard, 5) Improved communication, 6) Cultivating responsive leadership, and 7) Redefining public accountability. Limitations: The data primarily relied on interviews with LTRC workers from western Canada. Implications: Recommendations are situated within existing policy and research for worker mental health and staffing. We discuss how supporting and listening to LTRC workers can strengthen pandemic preparedness, workforce mental health, and delivery of quality person-centered care. We position the increased presence of worker voices in knowledge generation and policymaking as vital for realizing the sectoral transformations needed in LTRC.
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CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
33 weeks
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