Selected article for: "chinese government and health status"

Author: Wang, Jinyao; Li, Danhong; Bai, Xiumei; Cui, Jun; Yang, Lu; Mu, Xin; Yang, Rong
Title: The physical and mental health for the medical staff in Wuhan Huoshenshan Hospital during COVID-19 epidemic: A Structural Equation Modeling approach
  • Cord-id: 0tbpa1tb
  • Document date: 2021_3_10
  • ID: 0tbpa1tb
    Snippet: INTRODUCTION: Early in the epidemic of corona virus disease 2019, the Chinese government recruited a proportion of healthcare workers to support the designated hospital (Huoshenshan Hospital) in Wuhan, China. The majority of front-line medical staff suffered from adverse effects, but their real health status during COVID-19 epidemic was still unknown. The aim of the study was to explore the latent relationship of the physical and mental health of front-line medical staff during this special peri
    Document: INTRODUCTION: Early in the epidemic of corona virus disease 2019, the Chinese government recruited a proportion of healthcare workers to support the designated hospital (Huoshenshan Hospital) in Wuhan, China. The majority of front-line medical staff suffered from adverse effects, but their real health status during COVID-19 epidemic was still unknown. The aim of the study was to explore the latent relationship of the physical and mental health of front-line medical staff during this special period. METHODS: A total of 115 military medical staff were recruited between February 17th and February 29th, 2020 and asked to complete questionnaires assessing socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, self-reported sleep status, fatigue, resilience and anxiety. RESULTS: 55 medical staff worked within Intensive Care and 60 worked in Non-intensive Care, the two groups were significantly different in general fatigue, physical fatigue and tenacity (P<0.05). Gender, duration working in Wuhan, current perceived stress level and health status had significant differences in fatigue scores (P<0.05), the current perceived health status (P<0.05) impacted on the resilience and anxiety of participants. The structural equation modeling analysis revealed resilience were negatively associated with fatigue (β=-0.52, P<0.01) and anxiety (β=-0.24, P<0.01), and fatigue had direct association with the physical burden (β=0.65, P<0.01); Fatigue mediated the relationship between resilience and anxiety (β=-0.305, P=0.039) as well as resilience and physical burden (β=-0.276, P=0.02). CONCLUSION: During an explosive pandemic, motivating the effect of protective resilience and taking tailored interventions against fatigue are promising ways to protect the physical and mental health of the front-line medical staff.

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