Clinic for Rheumatology and Immunology, Hannover Medical School, Hanover, Germany.
German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Braunschweig, Germany.
Front Public Health. 2022 May 20;10:898840. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.898840. eCollection 2022.
This study analyses how healthcare workers (HCWs) perceived risks, protection and preventive measures during the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to medically approved risks and organizational measures. The aim is to explore "blind spots" of pandemic protection and make mental health needs of HCWs visible.
We have chosen an "optimal-case" scenario of a high-income country with a well-resourced hospital sector and low HCW infection rate at the organizational level to explore governance gaps in HCW protection. A German multi-method hospital study at Hannover Medical School served as empirical case; document analysis, expert information and survey data ( = 1,163) were collected as part of a clinical study into SARS-CoV-2 serology testing during the second wave of the pandemic (November 2020-February 2021). Selected survey items included perceptions of risks, protection and preventive measures. Descriptive statistical analysis and regression were undertaken for gender, profession and COVID-19 patient care.
The results reveal a low risk of 1% medically approved infections among participants, but a much higher mean personal risk estimate of 15%. The majority (68.4%) expressed "some" to "very strong" fear of acquiring infection at the workplace. Individual protective behavior and compliance with protective workplace measures were estimated as very high. Yet only about half of the respondents felt strongly protected by the employer; 12% even perceived "no" or "little" protection. Gender and contact with COVID-19 patients had no significant effect on the estimations of infection risks and protective workplace behavior, but nursing was correlated with higher levels of personal risk estimations and fear of infection.
A strong mismatch between low medically approved risk and personal risk perceptions of HCWs brings stressors and threats into view, that may be preventable through better information, training/education and risk communication and through investment in mental health and inclusion in pandemic preparedness plans.
本研究分析了医疗工作者(HCWs)在 COVID-19 大流行期间如何感知风险、保护和预防措施,以及与医学认可的风险和组织措施相关的感知。目的是探索大流行保护的“盲点”,并使 HCWs 的心理健康需求可见。
我们选择了一个高收入国家的“最佳案例”,该国家拥有资源充足的医院部门和低 HCW 感染率的组织层面,以探索 HCW 保护方面的治理差距。汉诺威医学院的一项德国多方法医院研究作为实证案例;作为 SARS-CoV-2 血清学检测临床研究的一部分,于 2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 2 月期间收集了文件分析、专家信息和调查数据(n=1163)。选定的调查项目包括对风险、保护和预防措施的感知。针对性别、职业和 COVID-19 患者护理进行了描述性统计分析和回归。
结果显示,参与者的医学认可感染风险低至 1%,但个人风险估计值高得多,平均为 15%。大多数人(68.4%)表示对在工作场所感染存在“某种”到“非常强烈”的恐惧。个体保护行为和遵守保护工作场所措施的估计值非常高。然而,只有约一半的受访者感到受到雇主的强烈保护;12%的人甚至认为“没有”或“几乎没有”得到保护。性别和与 COVID-19 患者的接触对感染风险和保护工作场所行为的估计没有显著影响,但护理与个人风险估计值和对感染的恐惧呈正相关。
HCWs 低医学认可风险与个人风险感知之间存在强烈不匹配,使压力源和威胁变得明显,通过更好的信息、培训/教育和风险沟通,以及对心理健康的投资和纳入大流行准备计划,可以预防这些风险和威胁。