Li Minjie, Yu Xingfeng, Wang Dan, Wang Ying, Yao Lipei, Ma Yunmiao, Liu Xiaomei, Zhang Yulian
Department of Nursing, Shaanxi Provincial People's Hospital, Xi'an, China.
Director's Office, Shaanxi Provincial People's Hospital, Xi'an, China.
Front Psychiatry. 2022 Sep 16;13:909071. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.909071. eCollection 2022.
Frontline healthcare workers were at a high risk of infection and developing mental health problems during the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). It is important to monitor the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and somatization among frontline healthcare workers in China.
This study aimed to investigate PTSD, somatization, resilience, and perceived stress among frontline healthcare workers fighting against COVID-19 and examine the mediating effects of perceived stress on resilience in both PTSD and somatization.
The study was conducted from December 2021 to February 2022 through an online survey of frontline healthcare workers fighting against COVID-19. The survey included questions regarding socio-demographic information, resilience (10-item Conner-Davidson Resilience Scale, CD-RISC-10), perceived stress (14-item Perceived Stress Scale, PSS), PTSD (Checklist-Civilian Version, PCL-C), and somatization (Symptom Checklist-90). The PROCESS macro for SPSS was used to examine the mediating effects of perceived stress.
Approximately 14.9% of healthcare workers had possible PTSD (PCL-C score of ≥ 44), and 41.04% of the workers had low resilience (CD-RISC-10 score of ≤ 25.5). Approximately 54.05% of healthcare workers were symptomatic, and 14.7% had a moderate or higher degree of somatization with sleep-related problems as the most common symptom. Perceived stress was negatively correlated with resilience ( = -0.527, < 0.001) and positively correlated with PTSD ( = 0.505, < 0.001) and somatization ( = 0.361, < 0.001). In addition, perceived stress mediated the relationship between resilience and PTSD [indirect = -0.382; bootstrapped confidence interval (CI), -0.454, -0.319] and somatization (indirect effect = -0.159; bootstrapped CI, -0.199, -0.123).
The prevalence of PTSD and somatic symptoms indicates that the mental health of frontline healthcare workers deserves more attention. Resilience is negatively associated with PTSD and somatization, and the relationship among resilience, PTSD, and somatization is mediated by perceived stress. Strategies for reducing perceived stress and increasing resilience may help to prevent and alleviate PTSD and somatization.
在2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)疫情爆发期间,一线医护人员面临着较高的感染风险和出现心理健康问题的风险。监测中国一线医护人员的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和躯体化症状非常重要。
本研究旨在调查抗击COVID-19的一线医护人员的PTSD、躯体化、心理韧性和感知压力,并检验感知压力在PTSD和躯体化中对心理韧性的中介作用。
该研究于2021年12月至2022年2月通过对抗击COVID-19的一线医护人员进行在线调查开展。调查包括有关社会人口学信息、心理韧性(10项Connor-Davidson心理韧性量表,CD-RISC-10)、感知压力(14项感知压力量表,PSS)、PTSD(平民版检查表,PCL-C)和躯体化(症状自评量表90)的问题。使用SPSS的PROCESS宏来检验感知压力的中介作用。
约14.9%的医护人员可能患有PTSD(PCL-C评分≥44),41.04%的医护人员心理韧性较低(CD-RISC-10评分≤25.5)。约54.05%的医护人员有症状,14.7%的医护人员有中度或更高程度的躯体化,睡眠相关问题是最常见的症状。感知压力与心理韧性呈负相关(=-0.527,<0.001),与PTSD呈正相关(=0.505,<0.001),与躯体化呈正相关(=0.361,<0.001)。此外,感知压力介导了心理韧性与PTSD之间的关系[间接效应=-0.382;自抽样置信区间(CI),-0.454,-0.319]以及心理韧性与躯体化之间的关系(间接效应=-0.159;自抽样CI,-0.199,-0.123)。
PTSD和躯体症状的患病率表明一线医护人员的心理健康值得更多关注。心理韧性与PTSD和躯体化呈负相关,心理韧性、PTSD和躯体化之间的关系由感知压力介导。减轻感知压力和增强心理韧性的策略可能有助于预防和缓解PTSD和躯体化。