| Literature DB >> 35457559 |
Ann Scheck McAlearney1,2,3, Alice A Gaughan1, Sarah R MacEwan1,4, Megan E Gregory1,3, Laura J Rush1, Jaclyn Volney1, Ashish R Panchal1,5.
Abstract
Police officers, firefighters, and paramedics are on the front lines of crises and emergencies, placing them at high risk of COVID-19 infection. A deeper understanding of the challenges facing first responders during the COVID-19 pandemic is necessary to better support this important workforce. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 21 first responders during the COVID-19 pandemic, asking about the impact of COVID-19. Data collected from our study interviews revealed that, despite large numbers of COVID-19 infections among the staff of police and fire departments, some-but not all-first responders were concerned about COVID-19. A similar divide existed within this group regarding whether or not to receive a COVID-19 vaccination. Many first responders reported frustration over COVID-19 information because of inconsistencies across sources, misinformation on social media, and the impact of politics. In addition, first responders described increased stress due to the COVID-19 pandemic caused by factors such as the fear of COVID exposure during emergency responses, concerns about infecting family members, and frustration surrounding new work policies. Our findings provide insight into the impact of COVID-19 on first responders and highlight the importance of providing resources for education about COVID-19 risks and vaccination, as well as for addressing first responders' mental health and well-being.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; education; emergency medical services; first responders; mental health; vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457559 PMCID: PMC9028623 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Interviewee characteristics.
| Participant Characteristics | Mean (±SD) or |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | |
| Mean (±SD) | 46 (±9) |
| Range | 29–56 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 14 (67) |
| Female | 7 (33) |
| Division | |
| Police | 13 (62) |
| Fire | 8 (38) |
| Role | |
| Department leaders | 4 (19) |
| Firefighters and paramedics | 5 (24) |
| Police officers | 8 (38) |
| Other | 4 (19) |
Perceptions about COVID-19 infection.
| Perspectives about | Comments from First Responders |
|---|---|
| Concerned | Another thing that worries me right now. I read the other day there is 4000 different strains, the variations of it. (Police officer, male, 50s.) |
| I really try to not put myself in a situation where I’m going to have ongoing risk. (Other staff, female, 40s.) | |
| Unconcerned | Like I wasn’t going to go actively breathe on people like when I had it, but I wasn’t afraid to get it. We just kind of rolled with it. We were just like, “If we get it, we get it.” (Police officer, female, 40s.) |
| The more we learn about the virus, I’m, you know, relatively young and in good health. I don’t have any comorbidities. So, I think the more we learn about it and the more statistics that I saw, I think, the less concerned I got about it. Doesn’t mean I wasn’t still careful about reducing the spread, but I wasn’t necessarily afraid of the potential of exposure. (Police officer, male, 30s.) |
Perceptions about COVID-19 vaccination.
| Perspectives about COVID-19 Vaccines | Comments from First Responders |
|---|---|
| Supporter | I do, I talk to pretty much everybody at work, who I work around, or I see at work and encourage it [COVID-19 vaccine]. (Department leader, male, 50s.) |
| We are all getting it, yeah. We were all on the no-waste list. And now that they just opened up to police today the remaining people in my section who never got called from the no-waste list are getting it. So, the whole section will have had it by the end of this week. (Other staff, female, 30s.) | |
| Non-supporter | None of them [coworkers] are getting it. Um, I just don’t think they’re buying into the, you know, you need this rushed vaccine. (Department leader, male, 40s.) |
| No, I have not gotten one and I don’t think I’m planning to. (Department leader, male, 50s.) | |
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| |
| Do not trust vaccine development | It just seemed like it was a little rushed to come out with a vaccine so quickly. (Police officer, female, 30s.) |
| Let’s face it, they rushed this thing through really, really, fast. So, let’s kinda wait and let everybody else take it since I know I’m safe for now. Let’s let everybody else be the guinea pig. (Firefighter, male, 50s.) | |
| Side effects | My biggest thing was just not knowing enough about what could potentially happen like in the future, if there were any long-term effects. That was like my biggest hold-up with it [COVID-19 vaccine]. (Firefighter, male, 30s.) |
| Everybody was like, “Yeah, I got a sore shoulder for 24 h. Big deal.” Then everybody started getting the second shot and they look like shit for four days. And then everybody’s looking around at each other like, “Do I really want to feel like that?” (Paramedic, male, 40s.) |
Confusion around COVID-19 information.
| Perceptions about | Comments from First Responders |
|---|---|
| Confusing and | We need to be all consistent with what’s coming out. So, we’re all doing the same thing. People mix up something as simple as saying quarantine when they mean isolation and vice versa. So, there’s definitely a lot of misinformation and mis-education in my opinion. (Other staff, female, 40s.) |
| The CDC guidelines is what we use. And I know for a first responder, that’s been a little bit challenging to understand sometimes. It’s changed from like as far as quarantine times, so that’s been somewhat confusing. (Police officer, male, 50s.) | |
| Misinformation on | There’s not much you can do with the way social media is. I mean anybody can, you know, jump on any number of numerous platforms and write an article or a post or something and then that’s shared by millions of people. And, you know, it’s hard to tell what’s real and what’s not. I think in any walk of life, it’s going to be tough to combat the misinformation. (Police officer, male, 30s.) |
| I think the greatest challenge in my personal world is sorting through the ridiculous beliefs that social media has put out as true. I feel very bad for people that believe a lot of the stuff that they quote-unquote “research” on social media. And I think people on social media are having a good time putting out ridiculous stuff just to see if people respond to it. And unfortunately, a lot of people believe that and buy into it. So, I think that’s really causing a lot of trouble with the ability to get the vaccine out and to push people in the direction of the vaccine. I feel like people are really getting a poor, poor representation of what the truth is through social media. (Paramedic, male, 50s.) | |
| Impact of politics | It’s all like one big like political issue. You have people on the left and right who are, you know, they’ve fallen on certain sides of the whole debate. So, I mean, you know about vaccines. Like everything is, even like wearing masks, and it was, it all became political. (Firefighter, male, 30s.) |
| I try to go to like CDC websites because I don’t trust any, either side of the news anymore, very much. I think both sides of the political spectrum slant the results to fit their agendas. So, I try to go with, with the CDC more than anybody else cause I figure, I mean, I’m sure there is some political crap there too, but I sort of trust them more than I trust anybody else. (Firefighter, male, 50s.) |
Stress induced by COVID-19.
| Work-Related Stressor | Comments from First Responders |
|---|---|
| Risk of COVID-19 | Quite a few members have gotten sick. Quite a few of them were, you know, pretty afraid to do their jobs and go out and do what they’re paid to do because they were worried about getting COVID. (Department leader, male, 40s.) |
| It is affecting officers. The whole unknown of going into different houses and you don’t know if you’re having contact with someone positive. And now people, if they’re in trouble with the law, they want to say they’re positive, hoping that the officer will just go away. But we can’t in that aspect. (Police officer, female, 40s.) | |
| Concerns about infecting family members | I worried about bringing it home to my son. Because they didn’t know at the time. That was my biggest concern. (Police officer, female, 50s.) |
| My only concern has been giving it, bringing it home. And so, you know, I change my clothes and I shower at the fire station. I walk in the front door, I take those clothes off, and I get in the shower. (Firefighter, male, 40s.) | |
| Adapting to new work | At the start I think some of my peers and the boss were not necessarily in belief that this is any different than the flu. And so for our staff there was like a split on enforcing or imposing a mask policy… the boss opted not to do it at that time. And I think in hindsight, though I thought at the time, and in hindsight, that was a mistake. It’s since got imposed, but I think that exposed a lot of people, plus set a tone that made it hard, harder to overcome when a policy did get imposed. (Department leader, male, 50s.) |
| Losing time. Like we’ve gone through so many different iterations of leave policies and you know, there was a point where people had to use their own time and that’s stressful as well. (Other staff, female, 40s.) |