From the Denver-Seattle Center of Innovation (R.A.), Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center; Department of Health Systems, Management and Policy (R.A.), Department of Neurology (Z.A.M., M.D.), Department of Internal Medicine (Z.A.M.), and College of Nursing (J.J.), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora; Departments of Neurology (M.B., M.K.) and Medicine (S.Z.P.), University of California San Francisco; and Departments of Neurology and Medicine (B.M.K.), University of Rochester Medical Center, NY.
Neurology. 2021 Sep 7;97(10):e988-e995. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000012363. Epub 2021 Jun 14.
Health care delivery systems transformed rapidly at the beginning of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic to slow the spread of the virus while identifying novel methods for providing care. In many ways, the pandemic affected both persons with neurologic illness and neurologists. This study describes the perspectives and experiences of community neurologists providing care for patients with neurodegenerative illnesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
We conducted a qualitative study with 20 community neurologists from a multisite comparative-effectiveness trial of outpatient palliative care from July 23, 2020, to November 11, 2020. Participants were interviewed individually about the impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on their professional and personal lives. Interviews were analyzed with matrix analysis to identify key themes.
Four main themes illustrated the impact of the pandemic on community neurologists: (1) challenges of the current political climate, (2) lack of support for new models of care, (3) being on the frontline of suffering, and (4) clinician self-care. Taken together, the themes capture the unusual environment in which community neurologists practice, the lack of clinician trust among some patients, patient and professional isolation, and opportunities to support quality care delivery.
The COVID-19 pandemic and pandemic politics created an environment that made care provision challenging for community neurologists. Efforts to improve care delivery should proactively work to reduce clinician burnout while incorporating support for new models of care adopted due to the pandemic.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03076671.
在 2019 冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行初期,医疗保健系统迅速转变,以减缓病毒传播速度,同时寻找提供护理的新方法。在许多方面,大流行既影响了患有神经疾病的患者,也影响了神经科医生。本研究描述了在 COVID-19 大流行期间,为神经退行性疾病患者提供护理的社区神经科医生的观点和经验。
我们对来自一项多站点门诊姑息治疗比较效果试验的 20 名社区神经科医生进行了一项定性研究,该试验于 2020 年 7 月 23 日至 2020 年 11 月 11 日进行。参与者单独接受了关于 COVID-19 大流行对其专业和个人生活影响的访谈。使用矩阵分析对访谈进行分析,以确定关键主题。
四个主要主题说明了大流行对社区神经科医生的影响:(1)当前政治气候的挑战,(2)缺乏对新护理模式的支持,(3)处于苦难的前线,(4)临床医生的自我保健。这些主题共同描绘了社区神经科医生执业的特殊环境、一些患者对临床医生缺乏信任、患者和专业人员的孤立以及支持优质护理服务的机会。
COVID-19 大流行和大流行政治创造了一个使社区神经科医生提供护理具有挑战性的环境。改善护理服务的努力应积极努力减少临床医生的倦怠,同时纳入因大流行而采用的新护理模式的支持。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT03076671。