Psychological distress and trauma in doctors providing frontline care during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom and Ireland: a prospective longitudinal survey cohort study

Bibliographic Details
Title: Psychological distress and trauma in doctors providing frontline care during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom and Ireland: a prospective longitudinal survey cohort study
Authors: Daniel Horner, Jo Daniels, Charles Reynard, James Foley, Blair Graham, Mark David Lyttle, M Anderson, J Browning, M Clark, S Foster, S Hartshorn, M Jacobs, S Messahel, N Mullen, J Brown, Michael Barrett, S Subramaniam, S Williams, A Ahmed, E Williams, S Hall, Edward Carlton, C Bi, M Khan, R Hannah, S Taylor, L Dunlop, J Gumley, K Knight, C Williams, J Turner, B Taylor, R Mills, M Lim, J Evans, C O’Connell, Tom Roberts, A Rai, P Singh, M Williams, S Graham, Etimbuk Umana, R Taylor, S Rahman, J Wright, J Lynch, S Lewis, P Fitzpatrick, J Ng, V Talwar, N Ali, G Pells, P Ellis, J Bailey, John Cronin, J Morgan, K Samuel, A Ali, M Patel, R Evans, S Morgan, A Hill, S Rao, S Currie, C Thomas, K Thomas, William Hulme, Katie Samuel, Robert Hirst, H Cooper, L McKechnie, S Pradhan, A Brookes, W Niven, L Kane, C Rimmer, K Kaur, R Stewart, T Hussan, P Cuthbert, M Alex, F Barham, R Macfarlane, M Jee Poh Hock, C Ward, C Weegenaar, O Williams, S Manou, MH Elwan, C Nunn, C Reynard, L How, D McConnell, J Muller, H Malik, K Challen, C Magee, S Pintus, S Langston, C Szekeres, L Kehler, C Leech, Y Moulds, A Mackay, R Wright, A Saunders, S Naeem, N Cherian, C Boulind, L Brown, E Grocholski, A Tabner, M Colmar, D Raffo, L Somerset, C Holmes, L Armstrong, S Collins, J Lowe, J Ritchie, F Wood, M Mohammad, S Wilson, R O'Sullivan, R Ellis, M MacKenzie, B Johnson, R Das, L Robinson, P Turton, L Robertson, A Robertson, J Hunt, João Vinagre, H Millar, R Freeman, A Corfield, R McQuillan, A Hormis, L Mackenzie, S Sharma Hajela, J Phizacklea, J Maney, K Malik, D Metcalfe, N Mathai, S Timmis, A Sattout, R Newport, E Fadden, D Bawden, B O'Hare, C Roe, D Bewick, F Taylor, L Barnicott, A Charlton, L McCrae, C Munday, E Godden, A Turner, R Sainsbury, A Lawrence-Ball, R House, S Patil, I Skene, M Winstanley, N Tambe, D Mawhinney, M Elkanzi, T Perry, W Kan, M Cheema, A Clarey, R Greenhalgh, A Gulati, S Marimuthu, K Webster, A Howson, R Doonan, B Shrestha, L Stanley, A Trimble, E Colley, J Lockwood, T Mohamed, H Jarman, S Ramraj, V Worsnop, N Masood, R McLatchie, A Peasley, S Bongale, U Bait, S Nagendran, A Hay, F Mendes, H Raybould, T Baron, C Ponmani, M Depante, R Sneep, Z Al-Janabi, A Rainey, N Marriage, B Mallon, J McLaren, S Hart, M Elsheikh, L Cocker, S Keers, K L Vincent, D Craver, N Sarja, N Moultrie, M Viegas, S Purvis, E Wooffinden, C Davies, S Foreman, A Da-Costa, C Ngua, S Duckitt, N Hoskins, J Fryer, T Hine, F Ihsan, L Frost, H Abdullah, K Bader, K Gray, M Manoharan, R Muswell, P Amiri, M Bonsano, S Shrivastava, F Raza, E Christmas, M Riyat, L O'Rourke, H Knott, K Adeboye, M Ramazany, K Iftikhar, N Abela, R Darke, D Maasdorp, H Murphy, H Edmundson, c Orjioke, L Harwood, D Worley, K Lines, W Collier, J Everson, D Ranasinghe, N Maleki, A Stafford, S Gokani, M Charalambos, A Olajide, H Ahmad, K Holzman, A Patton, S Gilmartin, S Uí Bhroin, S Kukaswadia, C Prendergast, C Dalla Vecchia, M Grummell, I Grossi, B MacManus, A Boyle, A Waite, J Vinagre, D George, C Battle, J Anandarajah, I Hancock, D Manthalapo, Ramesh Babu, FM Burton, I Musliam, Veettil Asif, M JeePoh Hock
Source: BMJ Open, Vol 11, Iss 7 (2021)
Publisher Information: BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: LCC:Medicine
Subject Terms: Medicine
More Details: Objectives The psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on doctors is a significant concern. Due to the emergence of multiple pandemic waves, longitudinal data on the impact of COVID-19 are vital to ensure an adequate psychological care response. The primary aim was to assess the prevalence and degree of psychological distress and trauma in frontline doctors during the acceleration, peak and deceleration of the COVID-19 first wave. Personal and professional factors associated with psychological distress are also reported.Design A prospective online three-part longitudinal survey.Setting Acute hospitals in the UK and Ireland.Participants Frontline doctors working in emergency medicine, anaesthetics and intensive care medicine during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020.Primary outcome measures Psychological distress and trauma measured using the General Health Questionnaire-12 and the Impact of Events-Revised.Results The initial acceleration survey distributed across networks generated a sample of 5440 doctors. Peak and deceleration response rates from the original sample were 71.6% (n=3896) and 56.6% (n=3079), respectively. Prevalence of psychological distress was 44.7% (n=1334) during the acceleration, 36.9% (n=1098) at peak and 31.5% (n=918) at the deceleration phase. The prevalence of trauma was 23.7% (n=647) at peak and 17.7% (n=484) at deceleration. The prevalence of probable post-traumatic stress disorder was 12.6% (n=343) at peak and 10.1% (n=276) at deceleration. Worry of family infection due to clinical work was the factor most strongly associated with both distress (R2=0.06) and trauma (R2=0.10).Conclusion Findings reflect a pattern of elevated distress at acceleration and peak, with some natural recovery. It is essential that policymakers seek to prevent future adverse effects through (a) provision of vital equipment to mitigate physical and psychological harm, (b) increased awareness and recognition of signs of psychological distress and (c) the development of clear pathways to effective psychological care.Trial registration number ISRCTN10666798.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2044-6055
Relation: https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/7/e049680.full; https://doaj.org/toc/2044-6055
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-049680
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/8bb128d7ad9a43de9f2244ace53ef9c0
Accession Number: edsdoj.8bb128d7ad9a43de9f2244ace53ef9c0
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:20446055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-049680
Published in:BMJ Open
Language:English