Ntontis Evangelos, Williams Richard, Luzynska Katarzyna, Wright Abigail, Rousaki Anastasia
School of Psychology and Counselling, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK.
Welsh Institute for Health and Social Care, University of South Wales, Pontypridd, UK.
BJPsych Open. 2025 May 19;11(3):e110. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2025.51.
Extreme events (e.g. floods and disease outbreaks) can overwhelm healthcare workers (HCWs) and healthcare systems. During the COVID-19 pandemic, high levels of distress and mental ill health were reported by HCWs.
To examine and synthesise research findings reported in the qualitative literature regarding the stressors, and their psychosocial impacts, faced by HCWs in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic, and to provide lessons for future support.
Qualitative articles were identified in EMBASE and OVID (preregistered on PROSPERO: CRD42022304235). Studies were required to have been published between January 2021 and January 2022 and to have examined the impact of COVID-19 on UK HCWs. We included 27 articles that represented the experiences of 2640 HCWs, assessed their quality using National Institute for Health and Care Excellence criteria and integrated their findings using thematic synthesis.
Several secondary stressors were identified, including lack of personal protective equipment, ineffective leadership and communication, high workloads and problems stemming from uncertainty and a lack of knowledge. Stressors were related to adverse psychosocial outcomes including worry, fatigue, lack of confidence in oneself and senior managers, impacts on teamwork and feeling unappreciated or that one's needs are not recognised.
Our thematic synthesis moves beyond simply mapping stressors faced by HCWs by considering their antecedents, origins and psychosocial impacts. Utilising a theoretical framework that points towards systemic deficiencies, we argue that secondary stressors can be modified to remove their negative effects. Consequently, workforce planning should shift from focusing on individual change towards amending psychosocial environments in which HCWs work.
极端事件(如洪水和疾病暴发)可能使医护人员和医疗系统不堪重负。在新冠疫情期间,医护人员报告了高度的痛苦和心理健康问题。
审查并综合定性文献中报道的关于英国医护人员在新冠疫情期间所面临的压力源及其心理社会影响的研究结果,并为未来的支持提供经验教训。
在EMBASE和OVID中检索定性文章(在PROSPERO上预注册:CRD42022304235)。要求研究发表于2021年1月至2022年1月之间,并研究了新冠疫情对英国医护人员的影响。我们纳入了27篇文章,这些文章代表了2640名医护人员的经历,使用英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所的标准评估其质量,并通过主题综合法整合其研究结果。
确定了几个次要压力源,包括个人防护装备短缺、领导不力和沟通不畅、工作量大以及不确定性和知识匮乏所引发的问题。压力源与不良心理社会后果相关,包括担忧、疲劳、对自己和高级管理人员缺乏信心、对团队合作的影响以及感觉未得到赏识或自身需求未得到认可。
我们的主题综合法不仅简单地梳理了医护人员所面临的压力源,还考虑了其前因、根源和心理社会影响。利用一个指向系统缺陷的理论框架,我们认为可以对次要压力源进行调整以消除其负面影响。因此,劳动力规划应从关注个体改变转向改善医护人员工作的心理社会环境。