Tripathy Swagata, Vijayaraghavan Bharath Kt, Panigrahi Manoj K, Shetty Asha P, Haniffa Rashan, Mishra Rajesh C, Beane Abi
Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India.
Department of Critical Care Medicine, Apollo Hospitals, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
Indian J Crit Care Med. 2021 Apr;25(4):374-381. doi: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-23782.
The impact of disruption to the care of non-coronavirus disease (COVID) patients (COVID collateral damage syndrome-CCDS) is largely unknown in resource-limited settings. We investigated CCDS as perceived by healthcare workers (HCWs) providing acute and critical care services in India.
A clinician and nurse codesigned and validated an internet-based survey, which was disseminated to HCWs using a multiple frame sampling technique.
Responses were received from 468 HCWs (completion rate 84%); at the time of the survey, 48% were working in critical care, 41% aged 30-40 years, and 53% represented public institutions. Respondents perceived a decrease in service utilization and disruption to time-sensitive acute interventions (60.1% and 40.8%, respectively), with fear of infection (score, 63.0; standard deviation (SD), 31.8) and restrictions due to lockdown (61.4; SD 32.5) being cited as the causes of service disruption. Being overwhelmed or lack of protective equipment was perceived to contribute less to CCDS. Insistence on COVID test results ( = 0.02) and duty-avoidance ( < 0.01) was perceived as significant causes for CCDS by HCWs from private hospitals and those in leadership roles, respectively.
Fear of infection and the effect of lockdown were perceived as important contributors to CCDS resulting in disruption to services and decreased service utilization. Perceptions were influenced by HCWs' role and hospital organizational structure.
Tripathy S, Vijayaraghavan BKT, Panigrahi MK, Shetty AP, Haniffa R, Mishra RC, . Collateral Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Acute Care of Non-COVID Patients: An Internet-based Survey of Critical Care and Emergency Personnel. Indian J Crit Care Med 2021;25(4):374-381.
在资源有限的环境中,非冠状病毒病(COVID)患者护理中断的影响(COVID附带损害综合征-CCDS)在很大程度上尚不清楚。我们调查了在印度提供急性和重症护理服务的医护人员(HCW)所感知到的CCDS情况。
一名临床医生和一名护士共同设计并验证了一项基于互联网的调查,该调查通过多框架抽样技术分发给医护人员。
共收到468名医护人员的回复(完成率84%);在调查时,48%的人从事重症护理工作,41%的人年龄在30至40岁之间,53%的人代表公共机构。受访者认为服务利用率下降,对时间敏感的急性干预措施受到干扰(分别为60.1%和40.8%),感染恐惧(得分63.0;标准差(SD)31.8)和因封锁导致的限制(61.4;SD 32.5)被认为是服务中断的原因。不堪重负或缺乏防护设备被认为对CCDS的影响较小。私立医院的医护人员和担任领导职务的人员分别认为坚持要求COVID检测结果(P = 0.02)和逃避职责(P < 0.01)是CCDS的重要原因。
感染恐惧和封锁的影响被认为是导致CCDS的重要因素,从而导致服务中断和服务利用率下降。认知受到医护人员的角色和医院组织结构的影响。
Tripathy S, Vijayaraghavan BKT, Panigrahi MK, Shetty AP, Haniffa R, Mishra RC, 。COVID-19大流行对非COVID患者急性护理的附带影响:对重症护理和急救人员的基于互联网的调查。《印度重症监护医学杂志》2021年;25(4):374 - 381。