4.2 Article

'I was prepared to become infected as a frontline medical staff': A survey of Australian emergency department staff experiences during COVID-19

Journal

EMERGENCY MEDICINE AUSTRALASIA
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 569-577

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1742-6723.13943

Keywords

COVID-19; emergency service; hospital healthcare staff; infection; mental health

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Australian hospital healthcare staff felt prepared and well-informed during the COVID-19 pandemic, but still experienced significant stress, infection concerns, and emotional challenges that should be addressed for future planning.
Objective To identify challenges faced by Australian hospital healthcare staff during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods We conducted an online survey (30 June-15 August 2020) of healthcare staff from Australian emergency and infectious disease departments. Participants were contacted via professional organisations and asked about preparedness, personal protective equipment (PPE), information flow, patient care, infection concerns, workload and mental health. We calculated the proportion of answers to yes/no and Likert-style questions; free-text responses were analysed thematically. Results Respondents (n = 162) were 23-67 years old, 98% worked in EDs, 68% were female, 87% from Queensland, and most worked as nurses (46%) or specialists (31%). Respondents felt their workplace was prepared for the pandemic (79%), had sufficient information about PPE (83%); none were sent home because of PPE shortages. Eighty-five percent received sufficient information from official bodies and 50% were aware of the National COVID-19 Clinical Evidence Taskforce guidelines. Most (83%) had sufficient information to provide optimal patient care, but 24% experienced unfair/abusive patient behaviour. Most (76%) were concerned about becoming infected by patients, 67% about infecting patients, and 78% about infecting someone at home. Workload decreased for 82% but 42% looked after more patients. Fifty-seven percent experienced additional work-related stress: 60% reporting experiencing anxiety and 53% experiencing burnout, with 36% and 46% continuing to experience these, respectively. Key challenges included: emotional, workplace/organisational, family/loved ones and PPE factors. Conclusion The Australian system provided sufficient information and PPE. Staff experienced considerable stress, infection concerns and emotional challenges, which merit consideration in preparing for the future.

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