Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
BMJ Open. 2023 May 5;13(5):e070982. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070982.
To determine emergency department (ED) physicians' perceptions regarding hospital companions being prohibited from accompanying the patient during COVID-19.
Two qualitative datasets were combined. Data collected included voice recordings, narrative interviewing and semistructured interviews. A reflexive thematic analysis was conducted and guided by the Normalisation Process Theory.
Six hospital EDs in the Western Cape, South Africa.
Convenience sampling was used to recruit a total of eight physicians working full time in the ED during COVID-19.
The lack of physical companions provided an opportunity for physicians to assess and reflect on a companion's role in efficient patient care. Physicians perceived that the COVID-19 restrictions illuminated that patient companions engaged in the ED as providers contributing to patient care by providing collateral information and patient support, while simultaneously engaging as consumers detracting physicians from their priorities and patient care. These restrictions prompted the physicians to consider how they understand their patients largely through the companions. When companions became virtual, the physicians were forced to shift how they perceive their patient, which included increased empathy.
The reflections of providers can feed into discussions about values within the healthcare system and can help explore the balance between medical and social safety, especially with companion restrictions still being practised in some hospitals. These perceptions illuminate various tradeoffs physicians had to consider throughout the pandemic and may be used to improve companion policies when planning for the continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic and future disease outbreaks.
了解急诊科(ED)医生对 COVID-19 期间禁止患者家属陪同的看法。
对两个定性数据集进行了合并。收集的数据包括语音记录、叙事访谈和半结构化访谈。采用反思性主题分析,并以常规化进程理论为指导。
南非西开普省的六家医院 ED。
采用方便抽样法,共招募了 8 名在 COVID-19 期间全职在 ED 工作的医生。
缺乏物理陪伴为医生评估和反思同伴在高效患者护理中的作用提供了机会。医生们认为,COVID-19 限制清楚地表明,患者同伴在 ED 中作为提供者参与患者护理,提供辅助信息和患者支持,同时作为消费者干扰医生的优先事项和患者护理。这些限制促使医生更多地通过同伴来了解他们的患者。当同伴变成虚拟的时,医生们被迫改变他们对患者的看法,包括增加同理心。
提供者的反思可以为医疗保健系统内的价值观讨论提供信息,并有助于探索医疗和社会安全之间的平衡,特别是在一些医院仍在实行同伴限制的情况下。这些看法阐明了医生在整个大流行期间不得不考虑的各种权衡,并且可以用于改进同伴政策,为 COVID-19 大流行的持续和未来疾病爆发做规划。