Kelker Heather, Yoder Kyle, Musey Paul, Harris Madison, Johnson Olivia, Sarmiento Elisa, Vyas Punit, Henderson Brooke, Adams Zachary, Welch Julie L
Indiana University School of Medicine.
Res Sq. 2020 Oct 15:rs.3.rs-87786. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-87786/v1.
While the coronavirus (COVID-19) has had far-reaching consequences on society and health care providers, there is a paucity of research exploring emergency medicine (EM) provider wellness over the course of a pandemic. The objective of this study was to assess the well-being, resilience, burnout, and wellness factors and needs of EM physicians and advanced practice providers (APPs) during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. A longitudinal, descriptive, prospective cohort survey study of 213 EM physicians and APPs was performed across ten emergency departments in a single state, including academic and community settings. Participants were recruited via email to complete four weekly, voluntary, anonymous questionnaires comprised of customized and validated tools for assessing wellness (Well Being Index), burnout (Physician Work Life Study item), and resilience (Brief Resilience Scale) during the initial acceleration phase of COVID-19. Univariate and multivariate analysis with Chi-squared, Fisher’s Exact, and logistic regression was performed. Of 213 eligible participants, response rates ranged from 31 to 53% over four weeks. Women comprised 54 to 60% of responses. Nonrespondent characteristics were similar to respondents. Concern for personal safety decreased from 85% to 61% (p<0.001). Impact on basic self-care declined from 66% to 32% (p<0.001). Symptoms of stress, anxiety or fear was initially 83% and reduced to 66% (p=0.009). Reported strain on relationships and feelings of isolation affected >50% of respondents initially without significant change (p=0.05 and p=0.30 respectively). Women were nearly twice as likely to report feelings of isolation as men (OR 1.95; 95%CI 1.82-5.88). Working part-time carried twice the risk of burnout (OR, 2.45; 95% CI, 1.10-5.47). Baseline resilience was normal to high. Provider well-being improved over the four-weeks (30% to 14%; p=0.01), but burnout did not significantly change (30% to 22%; p=0.39). This survey of frontline EM providers during the initial surge of COVID-19 found that despite being a resilient group, the majority experienced stress, anxiety, fear, and concerns about personal safety due to COVID-19, with many at risk for burnout. The sustained impact of the pandemic on EM provider wellness deserves further investigation to guide targeted interventions.
虽然冠状病毒病(COVID-19)对社会和医疗服务提供者产生了深远影响,但在大流行期间,探索急诊医学(EM)提供者健康状况的研究却很少。本研究的目的是评估在COVID-19大流行初期急诊医学医生和高级实践提供者(APP)的幸福感、恢复力、职业倦怠以及健康因素和需求。在一个州的十个急诊科(包括学术和社区环境)对213名急诊医学医生和APP进行了一项纵向、描述性、前瞻性队列调查研究。通过电子邮件招募参与者,以完成四份每周一次的自愿、匿名问卷,这些问卷由用于评估COVID-19初期加速阶段的幸福感(幸福感指数)、职业倦怠(医生工作生活研究项目)和恢复力(简短恢复力量表)的定制且经过验证的工具组成。进行了单因素和多因素分析,采用卡方检验、费舍尔精确检验和逻辑回归。在213名符合条件的参与者中,四周内的回复率在31%至53%之间。女性占回复者的54%至60%。未回复者的特征与回复者相似。对个人安全的担忧从85%降至61%(p<0.001)。对基本自我护理的影响从66%降至32%(p<0.001)。压力、焦虑或恐惧症状最初为83%,降至66%(p=0.009)。报告的人际关系紧张和孤独感最初影响了超过50%的受访者,且无显著变化(分别为p=0.05和p=0.30)。女性报告孤独感的可能性几乎是男性的两倍(比值比1.95;95%置信区间1.82 - 5.88)。兼职工作的职业倦怠风险是全职工作的两倍(比值比2.45;95%置信区间1.10 - 5.47)。基线恢复力正常至高。提供者的幸福感在四周内有所改善(从30%降至14%;p=0.01),但职业倦怠没有显著变化(从30%降至22%;p=0.39)。这项对COVID-19初期激增期间一线急诊医学提供者的调查发现,尽管这是一个有恢复力的群体,但大多数人因COVID-19经历了压力、焦虑、恐惧以及对个人安全的担忧,许多人有职业倦怠的风险。大流行对急诊医学提供者健康状况的持续影响值得进一步研究,以指导有针对性的干预措施。