| Literature DB >> 33254081 |
John H Krystal1, Javier Alvarado2, Samuel A Ball3, Frank G Fortunati4, Mary Hu5, Michael E Ivy6, Jennifer Kapo7, Kristine D Olson8, Robert M Rohrbaugh9, Rajita Sinha10, Jacob K Tebes11, Ronald J Vender12, Kimberly A Yonkers13, Linda C Mayes14.
Abstract
The burden of the COVID-19 pandemic upon healthcare workers necessitates a systematic effort to support their resilience. This article describes the Yale University and Yale New Haven Health System effort to unite several independent initiatives into a coherent integrated model for institutional support for healthcare workers. Here, we highlight both opportunities and challenges faced in attempting to support healthcare workers during this pandemic. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33254081 PMCID: PMC7680059 DOI: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2020.11.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gen Hosp Psychiatry ISSN: 0163-8343 Impact factor: 3.238
Fig. 1This figure illustrates the three-tiered program developed at Yale to support healthcare workers and associated staff.
This table summarizes our interventions intended to support healthcare workers. Town Halls – General: Stress and Resilience Town Halls open to the entire community and covering themes of broad interest. Town Halls – Specific: Stress and Resilience Town Halls targeting particular groups (medical students, hospitalists, particular medical school departments, etc.). Mindfulness Courses: Weekly mindfulness courses provided by the Yale Stress Center that were open to the healthcare community. Individual Evaluations: Individuals signed up on the web, were contacted within 24 h, and received an evaluation and, if needed, referral. In-Hospital Visits were provided by the Psychological Medicine Service and YNHH Social Work Service to nearly every inpatient unit, nearly every day.
| Activity | FTE | Total number of sessions | Total number of attendees |
|---|---|---|---|
| Town Halls | Paid: 0.75 FTE Psychologist | General: 69 | General: 739 |
| Dedicated: 41 | Dedicated: 2034 | ||
| 0.25 FTE Administrative Assistant | |||
| 0.1 FTE Techical support | |||
| 0.5 FTE PhD Fellows | |||
| Volunteer: 0.3 FTE Psychologist or Psychiatrist | |||
| Mindfulness Courses | Paid: 0.5 FTE Social Worker | Free Weekly Sessions: 16 | General: 640 |
| Volunteer: 0.1 FTE Psychologist | Structured 8-week course: 3 cycles (27 sessions) | All classes: 671 | |
| Individual Brief Interventions | Paid: 0.3 FTE Psychologist (administration, website revision) | 1–4 Sessions per person | 70 Web Contact Requests |
| 51 Contacts | |||
| 0.1 FTE Psychiatrist | 19 Did not respond to outreach | ||
| 0.1 FTE Psychologist (training) | |||
| 0.2 FTE (clinical supervision, treatment for 96 sessions) | |||
| Volunteer: 34 sessions | |||
| In-Hospital Unit-based Visits | Paid: M.D. 0.8 FTE | – | – |
| M.S.W.: 11.25 FTE | |||
| Leadership Support | Paid: .4FTE Deputy Dean for Professionaism & Leadership (devoted 0.2 FTE to this effort) | Weekly Planning Meetings with Team | Between 15 and 30 in townhalls week to week |
| Weekly Town Halls (cince Apeil) | |||
| Individual coaching offered to 70 unit leaders; uptake varied from weekly to as needed | |||
| Volunteer: 0.2 FTE X2 consultants from Yale School of Management | |||
| Regular coaching sessions with individual unit leaders (nurses and MD's—usually weekly) | |||
| .2FTE X2 Yale School of Medicine faculty (MD's) | |||
| .2FTE Psychologists | |||
| Webpage Management | 0.2 FTE Administrator | 2534 webpage users | – |
| Website building/management: 80 h | |||
| Survey development/design 40 h |
FTE estimates refer to the initial 4 months following the appearance of COVID-19. FTE estimates for the Town Halls include allocations for preparation/organization and the conduct of the sessions.
The in-hospital rounding began in mid-March and ended in mid-June.
The Yale Stress Self-Assessment for COVID-19 (YSSA-COVID-19). Overall stress scores: 0–9 (mild), 10–15 (moderate), 16–20 (high). Overall stress was assessed using the following items: loss of confidence in managing work, family, and life demands; exposure to death or threat of death for self and loved ones; feeling out of control; feeling guilty or ashamed; and blaming others for their distress. Stress symptom scores: 0–4 (mild), 5–9 (moderate), 10–17 (high). Participants were asked to rate increases in symptoms associated with the pandemic and reflect a degree of increased level of stress above the usual level of stress.
| Overall stress during Covid-19 |
In the last month, how often have you |
0 = Never |
1 = Almost never |
2 = Sometimes |
3 = Fairly often |
4 = Very often |
During the COVID-19 crisis, how much exposure to death or threat of death did you perceive for yourself or your loved ones, or through witnessing it in others, or through repeatedly hearing extreme adverse details? |
0 = Never |
1 = Almost never |
2 = Sometimes |
3 = Fairly often |
4 = Very often |
During the COVID-19 crisis, I have felt… |
Out of control |
0 = Not at all |
1 = A little |
2 = Somewhat |
3 = Definitely |
4 = Most definitely |
Guilty or ashamed for what I did or did not do |
0 = Not at all |
1 = A little |
2 = Somewhat |
3 = Definitely |
4 = Most definitely |
Blame toward others for the situation |
0 = Not at all |
1 = A little |
2 = Somewhat |
3 = Definitely |
4 = Most definitely |
| Stress signs |
| Check-in with yourself – have you noticed an increase in any of the following stress signs, three or more times per week? Please check all that you have notices: |
| □ Tired, exhausted or fatigued |
| □ Sleep difficulties |
| □ Forgetting things |
| □ Irritable, frustrated or emotional |
| □ Anxious, tense, nervous |
| □ Racing or slowing thoughts |
| □ Losing focus or concentration |
| □ Feeling down or hopeless |
| □ Feeling of grief or loss |
| □ Distant and cut off from people |
| □ Headaches |
| □ Aches and pains |
| □ Alcohol use |
| □ Dwelling on past events |
| □ Other signs specific to you |
Top-line Yale Stress Self-Assessment for COVID-19 (YSSA-COVID-19) results from 8299 respondents, approximately 20% of the sample invited to complete the questionnaire.
| Age: Mean (SD) [N] | 45.1 (12.9) ( |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Women (N[%]) | 6547 [78.9] |
| Men (N[%]) | 1603 [19.3] |
| Non-Binary (N[%]) | 19 [0.2] |
| Other/Missing (N[%]) | 130 [1.6] |
| Staff discipline | |
| Physician (N[%]) | 710 [8.6] |
| Non-Physician (N[%]) | 7544 [90.9] |
| Missing (N[%]) | 45 [0.5] |
| Affiliation | |
| Yale School of Medicine (N[%]) | 1342 [16.2] |
| Yale Medicine (N[%]) | 581 [7.0] |
| Yale New Haven Health System (N[%]) | 6261 [75.4] |
| Missing (N[%]) | 115 [1.4] |
| Mean overall stress scores | |
| Overall Stress: Mean (SD) | 7.6 (4.0) |
| Stress Symptoms: Mean (SD) | 5.52 (3.9) ( |
| Moderate/High Stress Scores (N[%]) | 2505 [30.2] |
| Moderate/High Stress Symptoms (N[%]) | 3871 [53.4] ( |