Ann Fam Med. 2022 Apr 1;20(20 Suppl 1):2771. doi: 10.1370/afm.20.s1.2771.
Context: The COVID-19 pandemic mandated personal protective equipment (PPE) in healthcare settings, obscuring clinician faces and expressions, and depersonalizing patient care experiences. PPE Portraits (affixing a clinician's photo to the front of PPE) was first introduced in 2015 during the West Africa Ebola epidemic, and has been shown to help maintain patient-provider connection at times when patients may be fearful, isolated, and unable to identify clinicians caring for them. Objective: To evaluate patient and clinician experiences with PPE Portraits. Study Design: Implementation pilot with mixed methods evaluation. Setting: A drive-thru COVID-19 testing site affiliated with a large academic medical center. Population studied: Patients (n=18) and clinicians (n=6) interviewed in March-April 2020. Clinicians were recruited through convenience sampling. Clinicians answered questions via recorded interviews or email. Patients were interviewed by phone through random sampling stratified by date of service. Patients were sent a post-visit survey. Intervention: Health workers affixed a PPE Portrait in order to connect better with individuals in their care. Outcome Measures: Patient and clinician experiences with PPE Portraits (assessed through inductive coding of qualitative data) and patient experiences with fear (assessed through survey). Results: Patient surveys indicated varying levels of fear, including mild (16%), moderate (66%), and severe (18%). Patients reported that seeing the PPE Portrait was comforting; four patients stated that it did not impact their care because they already trusted the facility. Clinicians corroborated patient sentiments, reporting that the intervention humanized both the testing experience for patients and also the interactions among patients and clinicians. They noted that patients seemed more at ease and that portraits fostered connection and trust, thereby reducing anxiety and fear and signaling to patients that they were being given holistic, optimal care. A majority of clinicians felt this intervention should be replicated, and they recommended having surplus portrait supplies on site to facilitate ad hoc portrait creation. Conclusion: PPE Portraits humanized the COVID-19 testing experiences for patients and clinicians during a time of fear. Clinicians recommended PPE Portraits for other healthcare settings that require PPE. Future research could assess how PPE Portraits promote patient-provider connection and trust.
COVID-19 大流行要求在医疗保健环境中使用个人防护设备 (PPE),这使得临床医生的面部和表情变得模糊不清,使患者的护理体验变得非人性化。PPE 肖像(将临床医生的照片贴在 PPE 的正面)于 2015 年在西非埃博拉疫情期间首次推出,已被证明有助于在患者可能感到恐惧、孤立和无法识别照顾他们的临床医生时保持患者与提供者的联系。目的:评估患者和临床医生对 PPE 肖像的体验。研究设计:混合方法评估实施试点。地点:隶属于大型学术医疗中心的免下车 COVID-19 检测点。研究人群:2020 年 3 月至 4 月接受采访的患者(n=18)和临床医生(n=6)。临床医生通过方便抽样招募。临床医生通过录音采访或电子邮件回答问题。患者通过随机抽样按服务日期通过电话接受采访。患者在就诊后接受调查。干预措施:卫生工作者贴上 PPE 肖像,以便更好地与他们护理的个人建立联系。观察指标:患者和临床医生对 PPE 肖像的体验(通过对定性数据进行归纳编码进行评估)和患者对恐惧的体验(通过调查进行评估)。结果:患者调查显示,恐惧程度不同,包括轻度(16%)、中度(66%)和重度(18%)。患者表示看到 PPE 肖像很安慰;有四位患者表示这并没有影响他们的护理,因为他们已经信任该设施。临床医生证实了患者的情绪,报告说这一干预措施使患者的检测体验和患者与临床医生之间的互动更加人性化。他们指出,患者似乎更加放松,肖像促进了联系和信任,从而减轻了焦虑和恐惧,并向患者表明他们正在接受全面、最佳的护理。大多数临床医生认为应该复制这种干预措施,并建议在现场备有多余的肖像用品,以便临时制作肖像。结论:在恐惧时期,PPE 肖像使患者和临床医生的 COVID-19 检测体验更加人性化。临床医生建议在需要 PPE 的其他医疗保健环境中使用 PPE 肖像。未来的研究可以评估 PPE 肖像如何促进医患之间的联系和信任。