4.7 Article

The Effect of COVID-19 Endemicity on the Mental Health of Health Workers

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Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2022.01.059

Keywords

Burnout; COVID-19; health care workers; mental well-being; depression; anxiety

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Despite high vaccination rates in Singapore, a surge in COVID-19 cases in October 2021 has put strain on the healthcare system. This study aimed to assess and compare the mental well-being of healthcare workers (HCWs) in 2021 with a previous cohort in 2020. The survey findings showed that HCWs in 2021 had higher levels of burnout, anxiety, and depression compared to 2020. Factors such as being an overseas HCW, South Asian ethnicity, and longer work hours were associated with poorer mental health outcomes.
Objectives: A major surge in COVID-19 cases despite Singapore's high vaccination has strained the health care system in October 2021. Our aim was to assess and compare Healthcare Worker (HCW) mental well-being in 2021 against a previously published cohort in 2020. Design: Cross-sectional survey study. Setting and Participants: HCWs from 4 public hospitals and a primary health care system over a 4-week duration in 2021 coinciding with a major surge compared with a similar period in 2020. Methods: A survey comprising of the Oldenburg Burnout Inventory (OLBI), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ) was distributed via email. Primary endpoints were the proportion meeting OLBI thresholds for both disengagement and exhaustion and being at risk for both Anxiety and Depression using HADS. Multivariate analysis identified significant predictors among demographic, workplace, and SAQ data. Subgroup analysis of overseas HCWs was performed. Results: We surveyed 1475 HCWs. Significantly more HCWs met primary outcomes using OLBI and HADS than in 2020 (84.1% and 39.6% vs 68.2% and 23.3%, respectively; P < .001). Burnout levels were uniformly high. A HADS score >8 in either subscale was significantly associated with meeting burnout thresholds (P < .001). Overseas HCWs (P = .002), South Asian ethnicity (P = .004), preuniversity educational qualifications (P= .026), and longer shift workhours of 8 to <12 (P = .015) and >12 (P = .001) were significantly associated with meeting HADS thresholds. Among overseas HCWs (n=407), seeing family more than a year ago was significantly associated with worse OLBI disengagement scores and a greater proportion meeting HADS thresholds vs seeing them within a year or being local HCWs (47.2% vs 37.2% and 35.6%, respectively; P = .001). Conclusions and Implications: HCW mental health has objectively worsened between 2020 and 2021 in the pandemic's second year. Avoiding prolonged shifts, adopting preventive mental health strategies, improving patient safety, and attention to HCWs of minority ethnicity, from overseas, and with preuniversity education may help. (C) 2022 AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.

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