| Literature DB >> 34948675 |
Sophie Harris1, Elizabeth Jenkinson2, Edward Carlton3,4,5, Tom Roberts3,4, Jo Daniels1,3.
Abstract
This study aimed to gain an uncensored insight into the most difficult aspects of working as a frontline doctor across successive COVID-19 pandemic waves. Data collected by the parent study (CERA) was analysed using conventional content analysis. Participants comprised frontline doctors who worked in emergency, anaesthetic, and intensive care medicine in the UK and Ireland during the COVID-19 pandemic (n = 1379). All seniority levels were represented, 42.8% of the sample were male, and 69.2% were white. Four themes were identified with nine respective categories (in parentheses): (1) I'm not a COVID hero, I'm COVID cannon fodder (exposed and unprotected, "a kick in the teeth"); (2) the relentlessness and pervasiveness of COVID ("no respite", "shifting sands"); (3) the ugly truths of the frontline ("inhumane" care, complex team dynamics); (4) an overwhelmed system exacerbated by COVID (overstretched and under-resourced, constant changes and uncertainty, the added hinderance of infection control measures). Findings reflect the multifaceted challenges faced after successive pandemic waves; basic wellbeing needs continue to be neglected and the emotional impact is further pronounced. Steps are necessary to mitigate the repeated trauma exposure of frontline doctors as COVID-19 becomes endemic and health services attempt to recover with inevitable long-term sequelae.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; frontline workers; healthcare workers; moral injury; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948675 PMCID: PMC8701930 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic and psychometric data.
| Demographic Information | |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| 20–25 | 32 (2.3) |
| 26–30 | 282 (20.4) |
| 31–35 | 286 (20.7) |
| 36–40 | 218 (15.8) |
| 41–45 | 189 (13.7) |
| 46–50 | 144 (10.4) |
| 51–55 | 124 (9.0) |
| 56–60 | 74 (5.4) |
| 61–65 | 25 (1.8) |
| 66–70 | 5 (0.4) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 590 (42.8) |
| Female | 742 (53.8) |
| Other | 5 (0.4) |
| Missing | 42 (3.1) |
| Ethnicity | |
| White | 954 (69.2) |
| Mixed or Multiple ethnic groups | 35 (2.5) |
| Asian or Asian British | 160 (11.6) |
| Black, African, Caribbean or Black British | 25 (1.8) |
| Other ethnic group | 15 (1.1) |
| Missing | 190 (13.8) |
| Seniority | |
| Junior doctor | 390 (28.3) |
| Middle grade doctor | 261 (18.9) |
| Senior doctor (consultant grade) | 560 (40.6) |
| Other senior doctor | 104 (7.5) |
| Other doctor grade | 64 (4.6) |
| Parent Speciality | |
| Emergency medicine | 570 (41.3) |
| Anaesthetics | 535 (38.8) |
| Intensive care medicine | 137 (9.9) |
| Other | 185 (13.4) |
| Psychometric Measures | |
| IES-R | |
| Median (Q1,Q3) | 16 (7.30) |
| Range | 0–88 |
| PTSD is of clinical concern ≥ 24 | 441 (32.0) |
| Probable PTSD ≥ 33 | 275 (19.9) |
| Missing | 98 (7.1) |
| GHQ-12 (0-1-2-3) | |
| Median (Q1,Q3) | 16 (12.20) |
| Range | 1–36 |
| Missing | 42 (3.0) |
Note: PTSD, Post-traumatic stress disorder. Junior doctors: F1, foundation year 1; F2, foundation year 2; ST1–3, general practitioner trainee/specialist trainee years 1–3, F2-ST3, clinical fellow. Middle grade doctor: ST4–8, specialist trainee/clinical fellows years 4–8. Senior doctor: consultant/associate specialist/staff grade/general practitioner/certificate of eligibility for specialist registration.
Themes, categories, and example quotes.
| Theme | Categories | Example Quotes |
|---|---|---|
|
I’m not a COVID hero, I’m COVID cannon fodder | Exposed and unprotected |
“Still having PPE below WHO standards i.e., no FFP3 masks for standard use, no protective eye wear—I had to buy my own goggles and using those plastic aprons while the Far Eastern doctors have full body suits to do even swab. Plus no negative pressure zones in my ED.” (#112, M, other senior doctor) “Did not feel good when loads of patients generating aerosol I was seeing and a lot of staff getting infected.” (#113, M, middle grade doctor) “Angry about how vaccine has been handled…Feel I agreed to first dose under false pretences, having gained informed consent for second dose at 3 weeks I don’t understand how they can then move the goalposts (we would surely lose registration if we did similar to patients with any medication) I believe this strategy is dangerous at an individual level for clinicians who are more at risk than if they had 2 doses and at a population level with risk of mutation…I believe it has been done purely to improve numbers for media purposes and I am so angry that having put our lives at risk for a year we are being forced to be less protected than we could be in terms of ppe and vaccine.” (#114, F, senior doctor) “I feel, at times, that I am considered totally expendable and that if I die or become ill not only will it have been preventable with political will, I will simply be an inconvenient statistic. I’m not a COVID hero, I’m COVID cannon fodder.” (#115, F, other senior doctor) |
| “A kick in the teeth” |
“Knowing the government was failing in so many ways to support us—failed test & trace, failed PPE procurement, weak messaging, permitted non-compliance with mask-wearing and distancing, set a poor example (Barnard Castle, etc.). We as healthcare providers were alone and utterly unsupported. Apart from the weekly round of applause that was a pointless gesture and felt like a kick in the teeth.” (#116, M, junior doctor) “Slow decision making from senior leaders invisibility of some of the executive team who should have been leading us, whilst they still blocked decisions we were making.” (#117, F, senior doctor) “In my experience I think the training programmes have had little sympathy or relaxation for how COVID affects training—all the official guidance says there will be extenuating circumstance but when it comes to progression only the most minor of issues are allowed to be attributed to COVID.” (#118, F, Other doctor grade) “The poor and frankly disrespectful way NHS Trusts have treated junior doctors (cancellation of leave, asking to work “voluntary” shifts, cancelling vaccine appointments for 2nd dose) has me feeling undervalued, disrespected and constantly angry.” (#119, M, junior doctor) “Have felt frustrated when seeing the public blatantly avoiding and not following the rules. It feels a bit disrespectful to ourselves and my colleagues some of whom have sadly lost their lives due to COVID.” (#120, M, senior doctor) | |
|
The relentlessness and pervasiveness of COVID | “No respite” |
“Unrelenting. Groundhog day.” (#132, M, senior doctor) “I am already very tired, worn out, burn out, and this looks like it will never end.” (#133, F, junior doctor) “A major incidence is fine but this has basically been a nearly 12 month major incident. Not one person I have spoken to hasn’t wished for a positive lateral flow test even if their PCR swab is negative just so it would mean a day or two extra off work.” (#134, F, middle grade doctor) “The difficulties of a heavy rota with very little exposure to social activities outside of work (which I personally used as a coping mechanism) has made my risk of burnout increase by a magnitude!” (#135, M, middle grade doctor) “Working with it consistently at work, then when at home it I’m being on news, tv and all anyone can talk about. No escape.” (#136, M, middle grade doctor) “I am working in the vaccine clinic which I find really enjoyable, no unpleasant events or PTSD.” (#137, F, senior doctor) |
| “Shifting sands” |
“The second/third wave has been much more difficult. Normal presentations have continued at a similar level to normal. Everyone is exhausted and worn out. I’ve found COVID deniers particularly upsetting.” (#138, M, senior doctor) “I was in ED in the first wave and saw a lot of traumatic and distressing scenes…This third lock down I’ve been working (in a different department) have had it relatively easy in comparison to the first wave and to my colleagues. This has left me with feelings of guilt that I’m not doing enough, and working in a different hospital has left me wishing I was where I was before doing the job I did in the first wave so I can help my friends and support them.” (#139, F, junior doctor) “It’s been much better for the 2nd wave. We’ve changed how we manage the anaesthetic workload & we feel more in control of our work. The work is stressful & sad but it is a shared experience & we are talking about it with each other.” (#140, F, senior doctor) | |
|
The ugly truths of the frontline | “Inhumane” care |
“There’s one patient who was only comfortable on 60 litres optiflow but we were running out of oxygen and I insisted he change to CPAP to conserve supplies. He needed intubation and then died and I feel guilty that his last conscious memory was of me torturing him with the CPAP mask. A young mother was admitted to ICU on CPAP and we’d just been given an ipad to help families video call: I kept asking the nurses to help her speak to her family but they delayed until it was too late and we had to intubate her, she died without saying goodby (goodbye).” (#121, F, senior doctor) “People on CPAP getting agitated and needing to physically pin them down and give sedation when you don’t think there is much hope of them getting better.” (#122, M, middle grade doctor) “Communicating bad news to relatives over the phone.” (#123, F, senior doctor) “Telling someone that their loved one is going to die over the phone, and then inviting them in to watch them die, when they have’t (haven’t) seen them for weeks is really traumatic for all.” (#124, F, senior doctor) “I feel guilty all the time now, as I don’t feel like I can be the doctor I would like to be or the doctor I wish would look after my loved ones.” (#124, gender unknown, junior doctor) “The patients are becoming in general increasingly difficult—verbal and physical abuse, spitting, hitting us, threatening us with legal action and a family charged into A&E looking to find me with violent intent obvious. This is not uncommon and becoming increasingly common.” (#125, F, middle grade doctor) |
| Complex team dynamics |
“Team bonding has been more difficult since we cannot go out together, we have to keep heing (being) aware of the distance, we cannot share food etc.” (#126, M, junior doctor) “My own biggest challenges have been the moral distress of watching colleagues struggle, and worrying about their wellbeing—this has been accentuated by the fact that my own world has been too busy in other related matters to be able to directly offload their workload, leading to feeling inadequate for prolonged spells.” (#127, gender unknown, senior doctor) “Shortage of staff. Decreasing staff morale. Cracks in the team.” (#128, M, Consultant) “The consultant body was extremely against supporting the rota, and this has made the department toxic to work in. This behaviour has filtered down to trainees, staff grades and allied staff. It’s been ugly.” (#129, M, middle grade doctor) “Pressure to play a meaningful role—my jobs meant I haven’t encountered many patients with COVID and therefore I feel I am not playing my part.” (#130, F, junior doctor) “The constant noise about how tough the ITU guys have had it has genuinely pissed me off (and I know that is totally unreasonable) because I look at my own specialty (EM) and I think about how bloody awful the last 5 years have been over wintertime—we’ve had patients dying on our corridors and all the trust ever seemed to want to do was apportion blame, so it got hidden and it was frankly fucking soul destroying- so when I’m asked to feel for my colleagues in the ITU I get that I should be sympathetic (and I can see how hard this is for them) but I don’t really feel as though I have anything left…Sorry, I know I’m meant to feel differently and I would if I could. I don’t think I would say this in an open forum though.” (#131, M, senior doctor) | |
|
An overwhelmed system exacerbated by COVID | Overstretched and under-resourced |
“This has been one of the worst winters I’ve ever experienced in my 12 years as a doctor. The bed crisis is shocking and we’ve gone back to the bad old days of patients being on trolleys in A&E for 12 h just waiting for a bed. We waited 8 h for an ITU bed last week, it’s unacceptable.” (#101, F, other senior doctor) “Intensity of long shifts in COVID ICU with very high workload, overstetched [overstretched] staffing. Worst week I palliated 3 patients in one week on call. Felt very sad and a little traumatised.” (#102, M, senior doctor) “Working in hospitals that run near 100% capacity near 100% of the time (prior to the outbreak) and then expecting and trying to take a service that has little slack and stretching it further. It’s been relentless and exhausting, sometimes you are left feeling that despite doing our best we should be doing better but can’t given the circumstances/resources.” (#103, M, junior doctor) “The numbers of unwell patients—many not suffering from COVID 19—who are attending hospital. Many are more unwell than they would have been in 2019 as the out-patient investigations are not happening quickly enough.” (#104, F, senior doctor) |
| Constant changes and uncertainty |
“Ever changing protocols with little to no indication from seniors (consultants or managers) regarding these changes prior or even subsequent to them—nurses definitely seemed to be more in the know than ED registrars.” (#105, F, middle grade doctor) “Frequent changes in work area and pattern. Fear of criticism or litigation when working outside normal practice.” (#106, F, senior doctor) “I have been moved across 3 hospitals within 12 months, requiring me to move home each time. We have been treated like pawns with no thought to how it affects our personal lives.” (#107, M, middle grade doctor) | |
| The added hinderance of infection control measures |
“Wearing PPE, I feel suffocated and experience physical symptoms (headache, overheating) and increased anxiety and brain fog, leading to slow decision making and insecurity and stress.” (#108, F, middle grade doctor) “Trying to communicate with patients when wearing a mask especially the elderly as they can’t hear and unable to lip read. You can’t smile at them to reassure them.” (#109, F, other senior doctor) “Angry infection control sisters bursting into handovers to tell us only four, not five people are allowed in a room, compromising safe handovers and making us feel like terrible people.” (#110, gender unknown, junior doctor) “Limited space for breaks and to eat meals due to social distancing measures. Lack of computer space for the same reason” (#111, M, middle grade doctor) |
Note: Participants are identified by #, participant number; M/F, gender; professional grade. CPAP stands for continuous positive airway pressure and comprises a mask and hose/or a nose piece to deliver air pressure to patients [53].