PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS OF INCREASING FREQUENCY OF COVID-19 PATIENTS AMONG FRONT LINERS/ EMERGENCY HEALTH CARE WORKERS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29309/IJAHS/2022.5.01,02.171Abstract
Objective of the Study: To determine psychological stress of increasing frequency of covid-19 patients among front liners/ emergency health care workers at Ziauddin hospital.
Methodology: This is a hospital based descriptive study conducted in Emergency department of Ziauddin Institute and Hospital from 1st April 2020 to 1st May 2020. The inclusion criteria involved all front line health care workers working in emergency department including medical (physicians, nurses, postgraduates) and nonmedical personnel visiting emergency departments (administrators, technicians, maintenance staff, allied health professionals. The exclusion criteria involved other health care professionals not being exposed to suspected COVID patients.
Results: Out of 65 working staff enrolled the mean age was 34.02 ± 6.017 years. Mostly working staff in emergency included males compared to females 48:17 (73.8%: 26.2%). During the first wave of Covid-19, there was increasing stress n=16 (24.6%) most commonly seen compared to isolated anxiety n= 6(9.2%), and depression n=4(6.2%). The severity of symptoms was mostly mild to moderate, very less patients had severe symptoms of depression, anxiety or stress or combined symptoms with statistical significant correlation found among severity and symptoms p value 0.000.
Conclusion: Our study showed the psychological impact of first wave of COVID19 among front liners with nearly almost all had symptoms of depression, stress and anxiety. The impact of pandemic seemed to be greater especially among our frontline team.
Keywords
COVID19, Health care workers, Emergency
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Independent Journal of Allied Health Sciences
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.