Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Woman Abuse Council of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Can J Public Health. 2024 Oct;115(5):756-769. doi: 10.17269/s41997-024-00904-7. Epub 2024 Jul 29.
Staff at violence against women (VAW) organizations provide essential services for survivors of violence. The increase in VAW during the COVID-19 pandemic placed additional pressures on VAW staff. We investigated the impacts of the pandemic on the mental health of VAW staff in the Greater Toronto Area to inform recommendations for policy and practice.
We conducted a community-based, mixed-methods study on the processes, experiences, and outcomes of adapting VAW programming during the pandemic using a sequential explanatory approach. Throughout 2021, we conducted a survey of direct support and leadership staff who worked on VAW services ("VAW staff") followed by semi-structured interviews with VAW staff purposively sampled from the survey. We descriptively analyzed quantitative survey data on the mental health of 127 VAW staff. We then applied thematic analysis to qualitative data from 18 interviews with VAW staff. We used the qualitative data to support interpretation and enrich the quantitative findings regarding staff mental health.
In the survey, 81% of leadership and 61% of direct support staff indicated that their work was more distressing during the pandemic. Participants reported moderate symptoms of vicarious trauma and mild symptoms of anxiety and depression. We generated three themes from the qualitative data to help explain these findings: (1) challenges related to changing work environments; (2) distress over not meeting client needs; and (3) difficulties in adapting self-care strategies in response to pandemic stressors.
VAW organizations require increased resources and flexible funding to hire and retain more staff to respond to higher and more complex caseloads during public health emergencies. With more structural supports in place, VAW organizations could create more time and space to develop their trauma-informed organizational practices: for example, establishing a culture of connection and learning among staff virtually and in-person and facilitating a range of self-care opportunities.
暴力侵害妇女组织(VAW)的工作人员为暴力幸存者提供重要服务。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,VAW 案件的增加给 VAW 工作人员带来了额外的压力。我们调查了大多伦多地区 VAW 工作人员的心理健康状况,以提供政策和实践建议。
我们采用顺序解释方法,对大流行期间适应 VAW 项目的过程、经验和结果进行了基于社区的混合方法研究。在 2021 年期间,我们对从事 VAW 服务的直接支持和领导工作人员(“VAW 工作人员”)进行了一项调查,随后对从调查中有意抽取的 VAW 工作人员进行了半结构式访谈。我们对 127 名 VAW 工作人员的心理健康状况进行了定量调查数据的描述性分析。然后,我们对 VAW 工作人员的 18 次访谈的定性数据进行了主题分析。我们使用定性数据支持对工作人员心理健康的解释和丰富定量结果。
在调查中,81%的领导人员和 61%的直接支持人员表示,他们在大流行期间的工作更加痛苦。参与者报告了中度的替代性创伤症状和轻度的焦虑和抑郁症状。我们从定性数据中生成了三个主题,以帮助解释这些发现:(1)与工作环境变化相关的挑战;(2)未能满足客户需求的困扰;(3)在应对大流行压力源时,自我保健策略的困难。
VAW 组织需要增加资源和灵活的资金,以招聘和留住更多的工作人员,以应对公共卫生紧急情况下更高和更复杂的案件量。有了更多的结构性支持,VAW 组织可以为发展他们的创伤知情组织实践创造更多的时间和空间:例如,在虚拟和现场建立员工之间的联系和学习文化,并促进各种自我保健机会。