Department of Neurosurgery, The First Hospital of China Medical University, No. 155, Nanjing North Street, Heping District, Shenyang 110001, China.
Department of Transplantation/Hepatobiliary Surgery, The First Hospital of China Medical University, No. 155, Nanjing North Street, Heping District, Shenyang 110001, China.
J Affect Disord. 2021 Nov 1;294:279-285. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.07.031. Epub 2021 Jul 18.
COVID-19 has become a public health emergency based on its clinical characteristics. Previous studies demonstrated that the onset of a sudden and immediately life-threatening illness could lead to extraordinary amounts of psychological pressure on nurses who play an important role in the illness. Whether COVID-19 pandemic has greater impacts on the psychological status and somatic symptoms from nurses who stand in the frontline of this crisis remain unclear.
We evaluated post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety and somatic symptoms in the frontline nurses (n = 438) who served in Wuhan, China, during COVID-19 crisis. Nurses who did not worked in the frontline of COVID-19 served as controls (n = 452). The investigation was processed by online questionnaires including: impact of event scale-revised (IES-R) , self-rating anxiety scale (SAS), and somatic symptoms.
Prevalence of moderate and severe PTSD was significantly increased in the frontline nurses compared to non-frontline nurses. Prevalence of mild anxiety was significantly increased in frontline nurses compared to non-frontline nurses. There were more frontline nurses suffering from severe insomnia and losing weight compared to non-frontline nurses. Severity of PTSD (IES-R score), but not severity of anxiety (SAS score) was similarly positively correlated to incidence of insomnia and weight loss in both frontline and non-frontline nurses to a similar extent.
The results only represented psychological statues and somatic symptom on one time point thus the development of psychological stress and somatic symptom during pandemic of COVID-19 in the frontline nurses were missing.
COVID-19 negatively impacted on psychological and somatic status in frontline nurses. PTSD may be the most reliability and validity criteria for evaluating psychological and somatic status for frontline nurses of COVID-19.
COVID-19 因其临床特征已成为公共卫生紧急事件。先前的研究表明,突然且立即危及生命的疾病的发作可能会给在疾病中发挥重要作用的护士带来巨大的心理压力。COVID-19 大流行是否对处于这一危机前线的护士的心理状态和躯体症状产生更大的影响尚不清楚。
我们评估了在中国武汉 COVID-19 危机期间服务的一线护士(n=438)的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、焦虑和躯体症状。未在 COVID-19 前线工作的护士作为对照组(n=452)。调查通过在线问卷进行,包括:修订后的事件影响量表(IES-R)、自评焦虑量表(SAS)和躯体症状。
与非一线护士相比,一线护士中度和重度 PTSD 的患病率显著增加。与非一线护士相比,一线护士轻度焦虑的患病率显著增加。与非一线护士相比,更多的一线护士患有严重失眠和体重减轻。无论在一线还是非一线护士中,PTSD 的严重程度(IES-R 评分)而非焦虑的严重程度(SAS 评分)与失眠和体重减轻的发生率呈正相关,程度相似。
结果仅代表一个时间点的心理状态和躯体症状,因此缺少 COVID-19 一线护士在大流行期间心理压力和躯体症状的发展情况。
COVID-19 对一线护士的心理和躯体状态产生负面影响。PTSD 可能是评估 COVID-19 一线护士心理和躯体状态最可靠和有效的标准。