Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2021 Dec 30;11(12):e056434. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056434.
A high functioning healthcare workforce is a key priority during the COVID-19 pandemic. We sought to determine how work and mental health for healthcare workers changed during the COVID-19 pandemic in a universal healthcare system, stratified by gender factors.
A mixed-methods study was employed. Phase 1 was an anonymous, internet-based survey (7 May-15 July 2020). Phase 2 was semistructured interviews offered to all respondents upon survey completion to describe how experiences may have differed by gender identity, roles and relations.
National universal healthcare system (Canada).
2058 Canadian healthcare worker survey respondents (87% women, 11% men, 1% transgender or Two-Spirit), including 783 health professionals, 673 allied health professionals, 557 health support staff. Of the 63 unique healthcare worker types reported, registered nurses (11.5%), physicians (9.9%) and pharmacists (4.5%) were most common. Forty-six healthcare workers were interviewed.
Reported pandemic-induced changes to occupational leadership roles and responsibilities, household and caregiving responsibilities, and anxiety levels by gender identity.
Men (19.8%) were more likely to hold pandemic leadership roles compared with women (13.4%). Women (57.5%) were more likely to report increased domestic responsibilities than men (45%). Women and those with dependents under the age of 10 years reported the greatest levels of anxiety during the pandemic. Interviews with healthcare workers further revealed a perceived imbalance in leadership opportunities based on gender identity, a lack of workplace supports disproportionately affecting women and an increase in domestic responsibilities influenced by gender roles.
The COVID-19 pandemic response has important gendered effects on the healthcare workforce. Healthcare workers are central to effective pandemic control, highlighting an urgent need for a gender-transformative pandemic response strategy.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,高功能医疗保健劳动力是一个关键优先事项。我们试图确定在全民医疗保健系统中,按性别因素划分,医疗保健工作者的工作和心理健康在 COVID-19 大流行期间如何变化。
采用混合方法研究。第 1 阶段是一项匿名的基于互联网的调查(2020 年 5 月 7 日至 7 月 15 日)。第 2 阶段是对所有完成调查的受访者提供的半结构式访谈,以描述经验如何因性别认同、角色和关系的不同而有所不同。
国家全民医疗保健系统(加拿大)。
2058 名加拿大医疗保健工作者调查受访者(87%女性,11%男性,1%跨性别或双灵),包括 783 名卫生专业人员、673 名辅助卫生专业人员、557 名卫生支持人员。在所报告的 63 种独特的医疗保健工作者类型中,注册护士(11.5%)、医生(9.9%)和药剂师(4.5%)最为常见。对 46 名医疗保健工作者进行了采访。
报告性别认同、家庭和照顾责任以及焦虑水平方面因大流行而发生的变化。
与女性(13.4%)相比,男性(19.8%)更有可能担任大流行领导角色。与男性(45%)相比,女性(57.5%)更有可能报告家庭责任增加。女性和 10 岁以下有受抚养人的人在大流行期间报告的焦虑程度最高。对医疗保健工作者的采访进一步揭示了基于性别认同的领导机会的感知不平衡、对女性的工作场所支持不足以及受性别角色影响的家庭责任增加。
COVID-19 大流行应对措施对医疗保健劳动力产生了重要的性别影响。医疗保健工作者是有效控制大流行的核心,这突显了迫切需要制定具有性别转化力的大流行应对战略。