Erin L Kelly1,2, Amy Cunningham3, Randa Sifri3, Oriana Pando3, Kelsey Smith3, Christine Arenson3,4. 1. Department of Family and Community Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania erin.kelly3@jefferson.edu. 2. Center for Social Medicine and Humanities, University of California, Los Angeles, California. 3. Department of Family and Community Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 4. Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically affected all areas of health care. Primary care practices are on the front lines for patients seeking health care during this period. Understanding clinical and administrative staff members' strategies for managing the broad-ranging changes to primary care service delivery is important for the support of workforce well-being, burnout, and commitment to primary care. METHODS: Thirty-three staff members from 8 practices within a single health care system completed short, semistructured interviews from May 11, 2020 to July 20, 2020. Interviews were coded using a combination of conventional and directed content analysis. RESULTS: Themes emerged from the data that mapped onto the Job Demands-Control-Social Support model. Participants reported that every aspect of primary care service delivery needed to be adapted for COVID-19, which increased their job demands significantly. Several also described pride in their development of new skills, and in most interviews, they expressed that the experience brought staff together. Staff engaged in active cognitive reframing of events during the interviews as they coped with increased workplace stress. However, as the pandemic changed from an acute stress event to a chronic stressor, staff were more likely to indicate signs of burnout. CONCLUSIONS: Primary care teams absorbed tremendous burdens during COVID-19 but also found that some stress was offset by increased support from management and colleagues, belief in their own necessity, and new development opportunities. Considering high prepandemic strain levels, the ability of primary care teams to persist under these conditions might erode as the crisis becomes an enduring challenge.
PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically affected all areas of health care. Primary care practices are on the front lines for patients seeking health care during this period. Understanding clinical and administrative staff members' strategies for managing the broad-ranging changes to primary care service delivery is important for the support of workforce well-being, burnout, and commitment to primary care. METHODS: Thirty-three staff members from 8 practices within a single health care system completed short, semistructured interviews from May 11, 2020 to July 20, 2020. Interviews were coded using a combination of conventional and directed content analysis. RESULTS: Themes emerged from the data that mapped onto the Job Demands-Control-Social Support model. Participants reported that every aspect of primary care service delivery needed to be adapted for COVID-19, which increased their job demands significantly. Several also described pride in their development of new skills, and in most interviews, they expressed that the experience brought staff together. Staff engaged in active cognitive reframing of events during the interviews as they coped with increased workplace stress. However, as the pandemic changed from an acute stress event to a chronic stressor, staff were more likely to indicate signs of burnout. CONCLUSIONS: Primary care teams absorbed tremendous burdens during COVID-19 but also found that some stress was offset by increased support from management and colleagues, belief in their own necessity, and new development opportunities. Considering high prepandemic strain levels, the ability of primary care teams to persist under these conditions might erode as the crisis becomes an enduring challenge.
Authors: Emily Franzosa; Ksenia Gorbenko; Abraham A Brody; Bruce Leff; Christine S Ritchie; Bruce Kinosian; Katherine A Ornstein; Alex D Federman Journal: J Am Geriatr Soc Date: 2020-11-20 Impact factor: 5.562
Authors: Kayla E Hatchell; Chelsey R Canavan; Tiffany D'cruze; Arvind Suresh; Alka Dev; Maureen Boardman; Meaghan A Kennedy Journal: J Prim Care Community Health Date: 2022 Jan-Dec
Authors: Tanya Wright; Faraz Mughal; Opeyemi O Babatunde; Lisa Dikomitis; Christian D Mallen; Toby Helliwell Journal: Bull World Health Organ Date: 2022-04-29 Impact factor: 13.831
Authors: Paulino Feliciano; Jennifer J Mootz; Antonio Suleman; Austin Y Su; Saida Khan; Lidia Gouveia; Palmira Santos; Milton L Wainberg; Annika C Sweetland Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2022-08-17