2019冠状病毒病大流行期间卫生保健提供者寻求精神卫生保健的差距-美国,2022年9月至2023年5月。

Anthony Papa,John P Barile,Haomiao Jia,William W Thompson,Rebecca J Guerin
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摘要

卫生保健工作者经历了严重的慢性压力、倦怠和精神痛苦,COVID-19大流行可能加剧了这些情况。为了确定改善这一人群寻求精神卫生保健的方法,研究了大流行期间美国卫生保健提供者的精神卫生症状、寻求护理和自我报告寻求精神卫生保健的障碍。在2022年9月至2023年5月期间,2603名初级保健医生、儿科医生、执业护士和医师助理参加了一项全国互联网小组调查。大约一半(45.4%)的参与者报告说他们不需要精神卫生保健,只有五分之一(20.3%)的参与者寻求过治疗。四分之一(25.6%)的提供者报告精神痛苦严重到足以满足精神病理学的诊断标准。在这些提供者中,只有38%的人报告寻求护理;20.1%的人表示,尽管症状严重,但他们不需要护理。提供者报告求医的平均年数较低。被认定为女性的医疗服务提供者也更有可能报告寻求护理。最常见的寻求护理的障碍包括难以从工作中请假、护理费用和对保密的担忧。与大流行相关的工作压力因素增加与症状严重程度增加有关,但工作主管的支持减轻了这些影响。组织人力资源实践、主管管理员工压力的培训、公共卫生信息以使精神卫生保健寻求正常化及其对许可的影响,可能有助于解决提供者寻求护理方面的差距,并改善患者的治疗效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gaps in Mental Health Care-Seeking Among Health Care Providers During the COVID-19 Pandemic - United States, September 2022-May 2023.
Health care workers experience substantial chronic stress, burnout, and mental distress, and the COVID-19 pandemic might have exacerbated these conditions. To identify ways to improve mental health care-seeking among this population, mental health symptoms, care-seeking, and self-reported barriers to seeking mental health care among U.S. health care providers during the pandemic were studied. During September 2022-May 2023, 2,603 primary care physicians, pediatricians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants participated in a national Internet panel survey. Approximately one half (45.4%) of participants reported that they did not need mental health care, and only one in five (20.3%) had sought care. One quarter (25.6%) of providers reported mental distress severe enough to meet diagnostic criteria for psychopathology. Among these providers, only 38% reported seeking care; 20.1% indicated that they did not need care, despite severe symptoms. The average number of years in practice was lower for providers reporting care-seeking. Providers who identified as female were also more likely to report care-seeking. The most frequently reported barriers to care-seeking included difficulty getting time off from work, cost of care, and concerns about confidentiality. Increased pandemic-related work stressors were associated with increased symptom severity, but support from work supervisors mitigated these effects. Organizational human resources practices, supervisor training on managing employee stress, and public health messaging to normalize mental health care-seeking and its effects on licensing might help address gaps in provider care-seeking and improve patient outcomes.
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