Physicians' Distress Related to Moral Issues and Mental Health In-Between Two Late Waves of COVID-19 Contagions

In addition to the sanitary constrains implemented due to the pandemic, frontline physicians have faced increased workloads with insufficient resources, and the responsibility to make extraordinary clinical decisions. In 108 physicians who were at the forefront of care of patients with COVID-19 duri...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2023-02, Vol.20 (5), p.3989
Hauptverfasser: Cooper-Bribiesca, Davis, Rascón-Martínez, Dulce María, Miguel-Puga, José Adan, Juárez-Carreón, María Karen, Sánchez-Hurtado, Luis Alejandro, Colin-Martinez, Tania, Anda-Garay, Juan Carlos, Espinosa-Poblano, Eliseo, Jáuregui-Renaud, Kathrine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In addition to the sanitary constrains implemented due to the pandemic, frontline physicians have faced increased workloads with insufficient resources, and the responsibility to make extraordinary clinical decisions. In 108 physicians who were at the forefront of care of patients with COVID-19 during the first two years of the pandemic, mental health, moral distress, and moral injury were assessed twice, in between two late waves of COVID-19 contagions, according to their adverse psychological reactions, in-hospital experience, sick leave due to COVID-19, quality of sleep, moral sensitivity, clinical empathy, resilience, and sense of coherence. Three months after the wave of contagions, the adverse emotional reactions and moral distress decreased, while moral injury persisted. Moral distress was related to clinical empathy, with influence from burnout and sick leave due to COVID-19, and moral injury was related to the sense of coherence, while recovery from moral distress was related to resilience. The results suggest that measures to prevent physician infection, as well as strengthening resilience and a sense of coherence, may be helpful to prevent persistent mental damage after exposure to a sanitary crisis.
ISSN:1660-4601
1661-7827
1660-4601
DOI:10.3390/ijerph20053989