4.7 Article

Psychological stress of medical staffs during outbreak of COVID-19 and adjustment strategy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 10, Pages 1962-1970

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmv.25914

Keywords

artificial intelligence technology; COVID-19; medical staffs; psychological stress; public health

Categories

Funding

  1. National Social Science Fund emergency management system construction research special project
  2. National natural science foundation Central China Think Tank special key projects: Natural science foundation of Hubei province [2020HZZK031, 2019CFB425]

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COVID-19 has a significant impact on public health and poses a challenge to medical staffs, especially to front-line medical staffs who are exposed to and in direct contact with patients. To understand the psychological stress status of medical staffs during the outbreak of COVID-19, random sample questionnaire survey was conducted among 2110 medical staffs and 2158 college students in all provinces of China through a questionnaire, which was compiled and completed through the Questionnaire Star platform relying on Wechat, QQ, and other social software. The differences in psychological stress status of different groups were compared through the analysis of the questionnaire. Results revealed that in all provinces of China, medical staffs scored significantly higher on all items of psychological stress than college students (P < .001). In Wuhan, medical staffs scored significantly higher than college students in all items of psychological stress (P < .001). While among medical staffs, the group in Wuhan area scored significantly higher than the group outside Wuhan on the following items: Thought of being in danger, The possibility of self-illness, Worrying about family infection (P < .05), Poor sleep quality, Needing psychological guidance, and Worrying about being infected (P < .01) in the Psychological Stress Questionnaire, but on the item Confidence in the victory of the epidemic, the group in Wuhan area scored significantly lower than the group outside Wuhan (P < .05). The emotion, cognition, physical, and mental response of front-line medical staff showed obvious exposure effect, which calls for a psychological crisis intervention strategy that can be helpful.

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