Al-Oraibi Amani, Tarrant Carolyn, Woolf Katherine, Nellums Laura B, Pareek Manish
Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Development Centre for Population Health, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2025 Apr 9;25(1):519. doi: 10.1186/s12913-025-12677-x.
Healthcare workers (HCWs) have been particularly impacted by long COVID, with negative effects on their work patterns and wellbeing. The aim of this study was to explore the intersection between work and long COVID for HCWs, to understand the impact of long COVID on their professional identify, their orientation to work, their wellbeing as professionals, and support needs and strategies for them as well as their managers to continue to work.
This qualitative study was conducted through semi-structured online interviews with three groups: HCWs with long COVID, their support network members, and healthcare managers between March 2023 and May 2024. To maintain confidentiality and address concerns about workplace stigma, healthcare managers were not matched with specific HCWs. Participants were recruited through purposive and snowball sampling, until data saturation was reached, defined as the point at which no new insights or themes were identified. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.
A total of 42 participants were interviewed from three groups, comprising 24 HCWs, five support network members, and 13 healthcare managers. Four key themes were identified describing experiences of long COVID for HCWs: (1) Living and coping with long COVID as a HCW, (2) Workplace impact and adjustments, (3) The uncertain nature of long COVID and challenges of the definition, and (4) Feelings of guilt, stigma and blame.
In conclusion, long COVID has created significant challenges not only for HCWs but also for their managers, who struggled with staffing shortages and lack of clear guidance, and support network members who experienced emotional strain while providing care. The combination of these challenges threatens NHS workforce stability and service delivery. Developing and embedding flexible, standardised workplace interventions-such as phased return-to-work policies and tailored occupational health support-could mitigate these impacts and inform scalable solutions across diverse healthcare systems. Enhanced training for healthcare managers and further research into culturally diverse coping mechanisms could improve support for affected HCWs, reduce stigma, and contribute to a more stable and resilient healthcare workforce. While based in the UK, these findings offer important insights for health systems globally that are grappling with the long-term workforce implications of long COVID.
医护人员受到新冠后遗症的影响尤为严重,这对他们的工作模式和健康状况产生了负面影响。本研究的目的是探讨医护人员工作与新冠后遗症之间的交叉点,以了解新冠后遗症对他们职业认同、工作取向、职业健康状况的影响,以及他们和管理人员在继续工作方面的支持需求与策略。
本定性研究于2023年3月至2024年5月期间,通过对三组人员进行半结构化在线访谈开展:患有新冠后遗症的医护人员、他们的支持网络成员以及医疗管理人员。为了保密并解决对工作场所污名化的担忧,医疗管理人员与特定的医护人员不进行匹配。通过目的抽样和滚雪球抽样招募参与者,直至达到数据饱和,即未发现新的见解或主题的点。使用反思性主题分析法对数据进行分析。
三组共访谈了42名参与者,包括24名医护人员、5名支持网络成员和13名医疗管理人员。确定了四个关键主题,描述了医护人员新冠后遗症的经历:(1)作为医护人员应对新冠后遗症的生活,(2)工作场所的影响与调整,(3)新冠后遗症的不确定性及定义挑战,(4)内疚、污名和指责感。
总之,新冠后遗症不仅给医护人员带来了重大挑战,也给他们的管理人员带来了挑战,管理人员面临人员短缺和缺乏明确指导的问题,支持网络成员在提供护理时也经历了情感压力。这些挑战的综合影响威胁到英国国民医疗服务体系(NHS)的劳动力稳定性和服务提供。制定并实施灵活、标准化的工作场所干预措施,如分阶段重返工作岗位政策和量身定制的职业健康支持,可以减轻这些影响,并为不同医疗系统提供可扩展的解决方案。加强对医疗管理人员的培训,并进一步研究不同文化背景下的应对机制,可以改善对受影响医护人员的支持,减少污名化,并有助于建立一支更稳定、更有韧性的医疗劳动力队伍。虽然本研究基于英国,但这些发现为全球正在应对新冠后遗症对长期劳动力影响的卫生系统提供了重要见解。