Howkins Joshua, Hassiotis Angela, Bradley Elspeth, Levitas Andrew, Sappok Tanja, Sinai Amanda, Thakur Anupam, Shankar Rohit
Department of Public Health, NHS Grampian, UK.
Division of Psychiatry, University College London, UK.
BJPsych Open. 2022 Apr 18;8(3):e84. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2022.49.
People living with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) have suffered disproportionately in health outcomes and general well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. There is emerging evidence of increased psychological distress. Increased strain has also fallen on clinicians managing the psychological needs of people with IDD, in the context of learning new technologies, staff shortages, reduced services and paused training opportunities.
To examine clinicians' experiences of patient care, clinical management and the impact of care delivery.
A mixed fixed-response and free-text survey comprising 28 questions covering four areas (responder demographics, clinical practice, changes to local services and clinician experiences) was developed, using the STROBE guidance. It was disseminated through an exponential snowballing technique to clinicians in seven high-income countries. Quantitative data were analysed and presented with Microsoft Excel. Qualitative data were coded and thematically analysed, and presented with in-text quotations.
There were 139 respondents, mostly senior physicians (71%). Two-thirds reported over 10 years working in the field. Quantitative findings include increased clinician stress (77%), referrals (53%), patient distress presentations (>70%), patient isolation (73%) and carer burden (89%), and reduced patient participation in daily activities (86%). A third reported increased psychotropic prescribing. Qualitative analysis outlined changes to clinical practice, particularly the emergence and impact of telehealth.
In the countries surveyed, the pandemic has not only had a significant impact on people with IDD, but also their carers and clinicians. A proactive, holistic international response is needed in preparedness for future public health emergencies.
在新冠疫情期间,智力和发育障碍(IDD)患者在健康状况和总体幸福感方面遭受了不成比例的影响。有新证据表明心理困扰有所增加。在学习新技术、人员短缺、服务减少和培训机会暂停的背景下,负责处理IDD患者心理需求的临床医生也承受了更大的压力。
研究临床医生在患者护理、临床管理方面的经历以及护理提供的影响。
根据加强流行病学观察性研究报告规范(STROBE)指南,设计了一项包含28个问题的混合固定应答和自由文本调查问卷,涵盖四个领域(应答者人口统计学、临床实践、当地服务变化和临床医生经历)。通过指数式滚雪球技术将问卷分发给七个高收入国家的临床医生。定量数据用微软Excel进行分析和呈现。定性数据进行编码和主题分析,并以文中引用的形式呈现。
共有139名受访者,大多数是资深医生(71%)。三分之二的受访者报告在该领域工作超过10年。定量研究结果包括临床医生压力增加(77%)、转诊增加(53%)、患者痛苦表现增加(>70%)、患者隔离(73%)和照顾者负担增加(89%),以及患者日常活动参与度降低(86%)。三分之一的受访者报告精神药物处方增加。定性分析概述了临床实践的变化,特别是远程医疗的出现及其影响。
在接受调查的国家中,疫情不仅对IDD患者产生了重大影响,也对他们的照顾者和临床医生产生了重大影响。需要积极主动、全面的国际应对措施,为未来的突发公共卫生事件做好准备。