| Literature DB >> 33154060 |
Cecilia Vindrola-Padros1, Lily Andrews2, Anna Dowrick3, Nehla Djellouli4, Harrison Fillmore5, Elysse Bautista Gonzalez2, Dena Javadi6, Sasha Lewis-Jackson5, Louisa Manby2, Lucy Mitchinson7, Sophie Mulcahy Symmons2, Sam Martin8, Nina Regenold5, Hannah Robinson9, Kirsi Sumray2, Georgina Singleton10, Aron Syversen2, Samantha Vanderslott8, Ginger Johnson10.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The COVID-19 pandemic has set unprecedented demand on the healthcare workforce around the world. The UK has been one of the most affected countries in Europe. The aim of this study was to explore the perceptions and experiences of healthcare workers (HCWs) in relation to COVID-19 and care delivery models implemented to deal with the pandemic in the UK.Entities:
Keywords: covid-19; infectious diseases; organisation of health services; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33154060 PMCID: PMC7646318 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Rapid appraisal design
| Data source | Method of data collection | Sample | Method of data analysis |
| Policy review | Policies were selected from legislation.gov.uk, gov.uk, NHSE and PHE databases. | 35 policies published between 1 December 2019 and 20 April 2020. | Data were extracted into Excel by one researcher and cross-checked by a second researcher who created a conceptual framework to categorise the policies. |
| Media analysis | Review of newspaper articles obtained from LexisNexis. | 101 newspaper articles published between 1 December 2019 and 20 April 2020. | Data extracted using REDCap and analysed for content using framework analysis (coding carried out by two researchers). |
| Data were selected using the software ‘Meltwater’ and sorted into pre-established categories. | 146 000 social media posts were collected from the period between 1 December 2019 and 30 April 2020. | Two researchers analysed content using inclusion and exclusion framework, and coded the selected posts independently. | |
| Front-line staff interviews | In-depth, semistructured telephone interviews with a purposive sample of staff. | 30 staff members working in emergency departments and intensive care units in three hospitals: | RAP sheets were used to synthesise findings on an ongoing basis. Selected transcripts were generated and analysed using framework analysis. |
| Male: 13 | |||
| Female: 17 | |||
| Nurses: 3 | |||
| Doctors: 25 | |||
| Allied health professionals: 2 | |||
| Senior staff: 18 |
NHSE, National Health Service England; PHE, Public Health England; RAP, rapid assessment procedures; REDCap, Research Electronic Data Capture.
Summary of findings from all three workstreams
| Emerging findings from all three workstreams | Examples from media analysis (including social media) | Representative quotes from the interviews | Content from UK policies |
| Concerns about changing and inconsistent guidelines | Staff used social media to share guidelines among colleagues. | ‘A protocol a day for every single step(…)becomes obsolete after 24 hours’ | Policies related to PPE, for instance, changed over the course of the pandemic, with one major change being the allowance of PPE reuse. |
| Lack of training (for redeployed staff but also in relation to PPE) | Newspaper articles indicated that HCWs felt that advice, information and training were insufficient. | ||
| Lack of streamlined and inconsistent testing of NHS staff | ‘Many healthcare professionals are questioning why they, as front-line NHS staff, are continuing to be denied testing for COVID-19 while an MP (Member of Parliament) has not’ (News article, 12 March 2020). | Policies and the infrastructure for testing HCWs increased throughout the study. | |
| Difficulties with PPE use (size, overheating, dehydration) | HCWs tweeted about dehydration and the challenges of PPE use when fasting during Ramadan. | Guidelines urged HCWs following Ramadan, and their NHS colleagues, to support their need to take breaks and stay hydrated while fasting and wearing PPE. | |
| Good well-being support | National guidelines have included more information on revised methods of delivering mental health services than on their availability and use by health workers. | ||
| Solidarity among colleagues | On social media some HCWs affirmed pride in doing their jobs on the front-line despite challenges and fatigue. | ‘The way people come together in a crisis has been a very enjoyable part of it…staff have formed new connections which I think they’ll strengthen our network at work and strengthen the way we work together.’ | |
| Demonstration that quick changes are possible in the healthcare system | ‘'We would not expect our system to be overwhelmed but would expect it to be radically changed (News article, 05/03/2020).’ | Rapid establishment of 3 laboratories to develop COVID-19 testing kits to test HCWs. |
HCW, healthcare worker; ICU, intensive care unit; NHS, National Health Service; PPE, protective equipment.