Author: Baumann, Brigitte M.; Cooper, Richelle J.; Medak, Anthony J.; Lim, Stephen; Chinnock, Brian; Frazier, Remi; Roberts, Brian W.; Epel, Elissa S.; Rodriguez, Robert M.
Title: Emergency physician stressors, concerns, and behavioral changes during COVIDâ€19: A longitudinal study Cord-id: 1tnat0ee Document date: 2021_2_16
ID: 1tnat0ee
Snippet: OBJECTIVES: The objective was to provide a longitudinal assessment of anxiety levels and work and home concerns of U.S. emergency physicians during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. METHODS: We performed a longitudinal, crossâ€sectional email survey of clinically active emergency physicians (attending, fellow, and resident) at seven academic emergency departments. Followâ€up surveys were sent 4 to 6 weeks after the initial survey and assessed the following: COVIDâ€19 patient exposure, availability of
Document: OBJECTIVES: The objective was to provide a longitudinal assessment of anxiety levels and work and home concerns of U.S. emergency physicians during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. METHODS: We performed a longitudinal, crossâ€sectional email survey of clinically active emergency physicians (attending, fellow, and resident) at seven academic emergency departments. Followâ€up surveys were sent 4 to 6 weeks after the initial survey and assessed the following: COVIDâ€19 patient exposure, availability of COVIDâ€19 testing, levels of home and workplace anxiety/stress, changes in behaviors, and performance on a primary care posttraumatic stress disorder screen (PCâ€PTSDâ€5). Logistic regression explored factors associated with a high PCâ€PTSDâ€5 scale score (≥3), indicating increased risk for PTSD. RESULTS: Of the 426 surveyed initial respondents, 262 (61.5%) completed the followâ€up survey. While 97.3% (255/262) reported treating suspected COVIDâ€19 patients, most physicians (162/262, 61.8%) had not received testing themselves. In followâ€up, respondents were most concerned about the relaxing of social distancing leading to a second wave (median score = 6, IQR = 4–7). Physicians reported a consistently high ability to order COVIDâ€19 tests for patients (median score = 6, IQR = 5–7) and access to personal protective equipment (median score = 6, IQR = 5–6). Women physicians were more likely to score ≥ 3 than men on the PCâ€PTSDâ€5 screener on the initial survey (43.3% vs. 22.5%; Δ 20.8%, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 9.3% to 31.5%), and despite decreases in overall proportions, this discrepancy remained in followâ€up (34.7% vs. 16.8%; Δ 17.9%, 95% CI = 7.1% to 28.1%). In examining the relationship between demographics, living situations, and institution location on having a PCâ€PTSDâ€5 score ≥ 3, only female sex was associated with a PCâ€PTSDâ€5 score ≥ 3 (adjusted odds ratio = 2.48, 95% CI = 1.28 to 4.79). CONCLUSIONS: While exposure to suspected COVIDâ€19 patients was nearly universal, stress levels in emergency physicians decreased with time. At both initial and followâ€up assessments, women were more likely to test positive on the PCâ€PTSDâ€5 screener compared to men.
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