Woyessa Ashenafi Habte, Oluma Adugna, Palanichamy Thanasekaran, Kebede Birtukan, Abdissa Eba, Labata Busha Gamachu, Alemu Tamirat, Assefa Lamessa
Department of Emergency and Critical Care Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Institute of Health Science, Wollega University, Nekemte, Oromia, Ethiopia.
Department of Nursing, Institute of Health Science, Wollega University, Nekemte, Oromia, Ethiopia.
Risk Manag Healthc Policy. 2021 Mar 17;14:1165-1173. doi: 10.2147/RMHP.S288003. eCollection 2021.
Willingness to work in disasters is context-specific and corresponds to the nature, magnitude, and threats posed by a particular public health emergency. None us is certain that our health professionals will continue to provide service should the COVID-19 pandemic crisis climb to its worst level. It was with this uncertainty in mind that this study was done to assess predictors of the unwillingness of health-care workers (HCWs) to continue providing their professional services during the climax of the COVID-19 crisis.
This was a facility-based descriptive cross-sectional study undertaken among 633 HCWsin western Ethiopia.
Overall, 205 (32.4%) providers said that they would be unwilling to continue work if COVID-19 peaked. Of these, 176 (27.9%) respondents reported that they would stop going in to work before they were at greatest risk. Statistical analysis performed to predict HCWs unwillingness' to continue work at peak COVID-19 showed male sex (AOR 11.4, 95% CI 8.32-12.6), younger age (AOR 25.3, 95% CI 4.61-40.67), lack of experience in handling similar pandemics (AOR 5.15, 95% CI 1.1-255), and low perceived level of hospital preparedness (AOR 2.05, 95% CI 0.80-5.21) were predictors of unwillingness. In accordance with the extended parallel-process model, higher threat perception (P≤0.001) and low efficacy perception (≤0.040) were associated with unwillingness of the HCWs to continue working.
The proportion of HCWs unwilling to continue their job during COVID-19 is sufficient to affect efforts tof fight the pandemic. As the question of whether our HCWs must risk themselves to treat COVID-19 patients does not have a uniform answer, working on predictors of potential unwillingness is of paramount importance.
在灾难中工作的意愿因具体情况而异,与特定公共卫生紧急事件的性质、规模和威胁相对应。我们没有人能确定,如果新冠疫情危机升级到最严重程度,我们的医护人员是否会继续提供服务。正是出于这种不确定性,开展了本研究,以评估医护人员在新冠危机高峰期不愿继续提供专业服务的预测因素。
这是一项在埃塞俄比亚西部的633名医护人员中进行的基于机构的描述性横断面研究。
总体而言,205名(32.4%)医护人员表示,如果新冠疫情达到高峰,他们将不愿继续工作。其中,176名(27.9%)受访者报告称,他们会在自身面临最大风险之前就停止上班。为预测医护人员在新冠疫情高峰期不愿继续工作而进行的统计分析显示,男性(调整后比值比[AOR]为11.4,95%置信区间[CI]为8.32 - 12.6)、年龄较小(AOR为25.3,95% CI为4.61 - 40.67)、缺乏应对类似疫情的经验(AOR为5.15,95% CI为1.1 - 255)以及对医院准备水平的认知较低(AOR为2.05,95% CI为0.80 - 5.21)是不愿工作的预测因素。根据扩展平行过程模型,较高的威胁认知(P≤0.001)和较低的效能认知(≤0.040)与医护人员不愿继续工作相关。
在新冠疫情期间不愿继续工作的医护人员比例足以影响抗击疫情的努力。由于我们的医护人员是否必须冒生命危险治疗新冠患者这个问题没有统一答案,研究潜在不愿工作的预测因素至关重要。