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Hospital-Based Health Care Worker Perceptions of Personal Risk Related to COVID-19

Everett Chu, MD; Kyung-Min Lee; Ronnie Stotts, MD; Ivy Benjenk RN, MPH; Geoffrey Ho, MBBS; David Yamane, MD; Billy Mullins, RN, DNP; Eric R. Heinz, MD, PhD

Corresponding Author: Everett Chu, MD; George Washington University Hospital. Email: etchu@gwu.edu

Section: Original Research

| FULL PDF |      

Background: Health care workers treating COVID-19 patients face significant stressors such as caring for critically ill and dying patients, physically demanding care requiring new degrees of personal protective equipment use, risk of contracting the disease, and putting loved ones at risk. This study investigates the stress impact from COVID-19 exposure and how nurses and medical providers (physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants) experience these challenges differently. Methods: An electronic, self-administered questionnaire was sent to all hospital staff over 6 weeks surveying exposure to COVID-19 patients and degree of stress caused by this exposure. Responses from medical providers and nurses were analyzed for significant contributors to stress levels, as well as comparing responses from medical providers versus nurses. Results: Stress levels from increased risk of disease contraction while on the job, fear of transmitting it to family or friends, and the resulting social stigma were highest in medical staff during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared to medical providers, nurses had nearly 4 times the odds of considering job resignation due to COVID-19. However, the majority of healthcare workers.

COVID-19 AHEAD OF PRINT

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