3.8 Article

Mental health patterns during COVID-19 in emergency medical services (EMS)

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SERVICES
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 193-206

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/IJES-08-2020-0052

Keywords

Emergency medical services; COVID-19 experience; Mental health patterns

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [SFRH/BD/135619/2018]
  2. Center for Psychology at the University of Porto [UIDB/00050/2020]
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/135619/2018, UIDB/00050/2020] Funding Source: FCT

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The study found that EMS personnel showed adequate psychological adjustment during COVID-19, with age, COVID-19 fear, and workplace security measures' adequacy contributing to whether they belonged to the well-adjusted or poorly-adjusted pattern. It underscores the need to further explore other COVID-19 fears, perceptions of workplace security measures, COVID-19 valid instruments, pre-COVID-19 data, and mental health patterns among different rescuers.
Purpose This study aims to explore patterns of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel's mental health, regarding their levels of anxiety, depression, stress, COVID-19 anxiety, obsessive-compulsive symptoms and well-being; and to explore variables that contribute to these patterns, among sociodemographic/professional and COVID-19 experience variables. Design/methodology/approach Participants were 214 EMS personnel, who answered the Patient-Health Questionnaire, Perceived Stress Scale, COVID-19 Anxiety Scale, Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory, Well-Being Questionnaire and COVID-19 related questions. Findings EMS personnel showed an adequate psychological adjustment during COVID-19. Two clusters/patterns were found: the poorly (34%) and the well (66%) psychologically-adjusted. Personnel's age, COVID-19 fear and workplace security measures' adequacy contributed to which pattern they were more likely to belong to. Research limitations/implications Despite being cross-sectional and not controlling for pre-COVID-19 data, this study adds to the COVID-19 literature. Findings call for the need to explore: other COVID-19 fears; how personnel perceive workplace security measures; COVID-19 valid instruments; pre-COVID-19 data; and mental health patterns with different rescuers. Practical implications Findings explored EMS personnel's patterns of mental health during the COVID-19, as well as its covariates. Results allow to better prepare emergency management, which can develop prevention strategies focused on older professionals, COVID-19 related fears and how personnel assess security measures. Originality/value This study contributes to the scarce literature focused on COVID-19 mental health patterns instead of focussing on isolated mental health variables, as well as what contributes to these patterns. Moreover, it is one of the few studies that focused on EMS personnel rather than hospital staff.

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