Department of Critical Care Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary & Alberta Health Services, 3134 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, T2N4Z6, Canada.
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, 3134 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, T2N4Z6, Canada.
BMC Psychiatry. 2021 Feb 10;21(1):91. doi: 10.1186/s12888-021-03090-9.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, physicians experienced unprecedented levels of burnout. The uncertainty of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic along with increased workload and difficult medical triage decisions may lead to a further decline in physician psychological health.
We searched Medline, EMBASE, and PsycINFO for primary research from database inception (Medline [1946], EMBASE [1974], PsycINFO [1806]) to November 17, 2020. Titles and abstracts were screened by one of three reviewers and full-text article screening and data abstraction were conducted independently, and in duplicate, by three reviewers.
From 6223 unique citations, 480 articles were reviewed in full-text, with 193 studies (of 90,499 physicians) included in the final review. Studies reported on physician psychological symptoms and management during seven infectious disease outbreaks (severe acute respiratory syndrome [SARS], three strains of Influenza A virus [H1N1, H5N1, H7N9], Ebola, Middle East respiratory syndrome [MERS], and COVID-19) in 57 countries. Psychological symptoms of anxiety (14.3-92.3%), stress (11.9-93.7%), depression (17-80.5%), post-traumatic stress disorder (13.2-75.2%) and burnout (14.7-76%) were commonly reported among physicians, regardless of infectious disease outbreak or country. Younger, female (vs. male), single (vs. married), early career physicians, and those providing direct care to infected patients were associated with worse psychological symptoms.
Physicians should be aware that psychological symptoms of anxiety, depression, fear and distress are common, manifest differently and self-management strategies to improve psychological well-being exist. Health systems should implement short and long-term psychological supports for physicians caring for patients with COVID-19.
在 COVID-19 大流行之前,医生经历了前所未有的职业倦怠。持续的 COVID-19 大流行的不确定性以及工作量的增加和艰难的医疗分诊决策可能会导致医生的心理健康进一步下降。
我们在 Medline、EMBASE 和 PsycINFO 中搜索了从数据库创建开始(Medline [1946]、EMBASE [1974]、PsycINFO [1806])到 2020 年 11 月 17 日的主要研究。由三分之一的审稿人筛选标题和摘要,三分之二的审稿人独立地、重复地筛选全文文章和提取数据。
从 6223 条独特的引用中,有 480 篇文章进行了全文审查,其中有 193 项研究(涉及 90499 名医生)被纳入最终审查。这些研究报告了在 7 次传染病暴发(严重急性呼吸综合征、3 种甲型流感病毒[H1N1、H5N1、H7N9]、埃博拉、中东呼吸综合征和 COVID-19)期间,医生的心理症状和管理情况,这些研究在 57 个国家进行。焦虑(14.3-92.3%)、压力(11.9-93.7%)、抑郁(17-80.5%)、创伤后应激障碍(13.2-75.2%)和职业倦怠(14.7-76%)等心理症状在医生中很常见,无论传染病暴发或国家如何。年轻、女性(与男性相比)、单身(与已婚相比)、职业早期的医生以及直接照顾感染患者的医生,与更严重的心理症状相关。
医生应该意识到焦虑、抑郁、恐惧和痛苦等心理症状很常见,表现方式不同,并且存在改善心理健康的自我管理策略。卫生系统应为照顾 COVID-19 患者的医生提供短期和长期的心理支持。