| Literature DB >> 35770054 |
Yuanxin Xue1,2, Jillian Lopes3, Kimberly Ritchie4,5, Andrea M D'Alessandro6, Laura Banfield7, Randi E McCabe4,8, Alexandra Heber4,9,10, Ruth A Lanius5,11,12, Margaret C McKinnon4,5,8.
Abstract
Healthcare workers (HCWs) and public safety personnel (PSP) across the globe have continued to face ethically and morally challenging situations during the COVID-19 pandemic that increase their risk for the development of moral distress (MD) and moral injury (MI). To date, however, the global circumstances that confer risk for MD and MI in these cohorts have not been systematically explored, nor have the unique circumstances that may exist across countries been explored. Here, we sought to identify and compare, across the globe, potentially morally injurious or distressful events (PMIDEs) in HCWs and PSP during the COVID-19 pandemic. A scoping review was conducted to identify and synthesize global knowledge on PMIDEs in HCWs and select PSP. Six databases were searched, including MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, PsychInfo, CINAHL, and Global Health. A total of 1,412 articles were retrieved, of which 57 articles were included in this review. These articles collectively described the experiences of samples from 19 different countries, which were comprised almost exclusively of HCWs. Given the lack of PSP data, the following results should not be generalized to PSP populations without further research. Using qualitative content analysis, six themes describing circumstances associated with PMIDEs were identified: (1) Risk of contracting or transmitting COVID-19; (2) Inability to work on the frontlines; (3) Provision of suboptimal care; (4) Care prioritization and resource allocation; (5) Perceived lack of support and unfair treatment by their organization; and (6) Stigma, discrimination, and abuse. HCWs described a range of emotions related to these PMIDEs, including anxiety, fear, guilt, shame, burnout, anger, and helplessness. Most PMIDE themes appeared to be shared globally, particularly the 'Risk of contracting or transmitting COVID-19' and the 'Perceived lack of support and unfair treatment by their organization.' Articles included within the theme of 'Stigma, discrimination, and abuse' represented the smallest global distribution of all PMIDE themes. Overall, the present review provides insight into PMIDEs encountered by HCWs across the globe during COVID-19. Further research is required to differentiate the experience of PSP from HCWs, and to explore the impact of social and cultural factors on the experience of MD and MI.Entities:
Keywords: global; COVID-19; healthcare workers; moral distress; moral injury; public safety personnel; scoping review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35770054 PMCID: PMC9234401 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.863232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 5.435
FIGURE 1PRISMA flow diagram.
FIGURE 2World map of the geographical distribution of included studies. The following geographies were represented: United States (n = 15), India (n = 6), China (n = 5), Canada (n = 4), United Kingdom (n = 4), Turkey (n = 3), Australia (n = 2), Ireland (n = 2), Lebanon (n = 2), Pakistan (n = 2), Belgium (n = 1), Indonesia (n = 1), Iran (n = 1), Libya (n = 1), Palestine (n = 1), Saudi Arabia (n = 1), South Africa (n = 1), Spain (n = 1), and Vietnam (n = 1). Two studies conducted with global participants and one study conducted on North American participants were not included in the following figure.
Study characteristics of included articles.
| Author | Region | N | Population(s) (n) | Setting | Research design | Recruitment/Data collection period | Study purpose |
| Ayyala et al. ( | North America | 251 | Physicians (n = 251) | Pediatric radiology (hospital and remote) | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | April–May 2020 | Explore the sources of stress and anxiety for faculty in pediatric radiology during the early stage of COVID-19 |
| Banerjee et al. ( | India | 172 | Physicians (n = 172) | COVID-19-designated hospital | Qualitative (interview) | April–August 2020 | Explore the adversities of HCWs and construct a conceptual framework of their psychological resilience. |
| Bayrak et al. ( | Turkey | 618 | Nurses (n = 618) | Health institution | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | May 2020 | Explore the relationship between anxiety levels and the anger expression styles of nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. |
| Billings et al. ( | United Kingdom | 28 | Mental health professionals (n = 28) | NR | Qualitative (interview) | June 8 - July 23, 2020 | Explore the experiences, views, and needs of United Kingdom mental health professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic. |
| Brophy et al. ( | Canada | 10 | Nurses (n = 5) | Long-term care home/Hospital | Qualitative (interview) | April–May 2020 | Explore how HCWs are navigating the compromised healthcare system in Ontario while facing the increased risk and pressures of COVID-19. |
| Creese et al. ( | Ireland | 48 | Physicians (n = 48) | Hospital | Qualitative (Interview) | June–July 2020 | Explore the perceptions of doctors of their own mental and physical well-being during the first wave of COVID-19. |
| Ditwiler et al. ( | United States | 10 | Physical therapists (n = 10) | NR | Qualitative (interview) | 23 June–17 July 2020 | Explore the experiences of physical therapists on the professional and ethical issues encountered during COVID-19. |
| Fawaz and Itani ( | Lebanon | 18 | Nurses (n = 18) | Ground zero hospital | Qualitative (interview) | January 2021 | Explore the psychological experience of Lebanese frontline nurses serving at ground zero hospitals. |
| Ffrench-O’Carroll et al. ( | Ireland | 408 | Nurses (n = 273) | Intensive care unit (adult and pediatrics) | Correspondence (quantitative (cross-sectional, survey)) | 7 May–5 June 2020 | Explore the extent of psychological distress on staff working in pediatric and adult ICUs during COVID-19. |
| Gaucher et al. ( | Canada | 187 | Physicians (n = 187) | Emergency department (general and pediatrics) | Quantitative/qualitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 29 June–29 July 2020 | Explore the experiences, concerns, and perspectives during the first wave of the pandemic. |
| Gunawan et al. ( | Indonesia | 17 | Nurses (n = 17) | Hospital | Qualitative (interview) | March–June 2020 | Explore the lived experiences of nurses combatting COVID-19. |
| Jia et al. ( | China | 18 | Nurses (n = 18) | COVID-19-designated unit | Qualitative (interview) | February–March 2020 | Examine ethical challenges encountered by nurses and their coping styles to ethical conflicts and dilemmas. |
| Kaelen et al. ( | Belgium | 44 | Nurse-aid (n = 17) | Nursing home | Qualitative (focus groups) | 15 June–3 July 2020 | Examine the psychosocial and mental health needs of nursing home residents during of the first wave of COVID-19 and how nursing home staff perceived their preparedness to address those needs. |
| Kanaris ( | United Kingdom | NA | Healthcare workers (NA) | Intensive care unit | Commentary | NA | NR |
| Maraqa et al. ( | Palestine | 357 (quantitative), | Quantitative: nurses (n = 161), physicians (n = 156), others (n = 40); | Hospitals and public health centres | Mixed methods (cross-sectional, survey; interviews) | Quantitative: 2 | Explore healthcare workers’ willingness to work and the associated factors, in addition to the ethical dilemmas during COVID-19. |
| Al Muharraq ( | Saudi Arabia | 215 | Nurses (n = 215) | Hospital | Quantitative (survey, cross-sectional) | Aug-20 | Explore the psychological impact of COVID-19 and coping strategies in frontline nurses working in Jazan, Saudi Arabia. |
| O’Neal et al. ( | Global (primarily United States, Kenya, Canada) | 839 | Physicians (n = 540) | Various settings | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 19 May–30 June 2020 | Explore the scope and specifics of moral distress and HCWs perception of risk during COVID-19 and generate discussion around ethical resource allocation. |
| Patterson et al. ( | United States | 34 | Medical family therapists and trainees (NR) | Family medicine clinic | Qualitative (cross-sectional, survey) | May–June 2020 | Explore moral distress in clinicians working in a family medicine setting. |
| Rao et al. ( | United States | 50 | Physicians (n = 22) | Safety net hospital | Qualitative (interview) | 22 April–8 July 2020 | Examine factors driving distress and motivation in interdisciplinary clinicians caring for patients with COVID-19. |
| Şahin and Kulakaç ( | Turkey | 356 | Nurses (n = 210) | Hospital | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 10-15 May 2020 | Explore anxiety levels of healthcare workers during COVID-19 and associated factors. |
| Silverman et al. ( | United States | 31 | Nurses (n = 31) | Academic Medical Centres (Acute Care) | Qualitative (focus groups/interviews) | April–June 2020 | Explore the causes of moral distress in nurses caring for COVID-19 patients and identify strategies to cope with threatened moral integrity. |
| Sukhera et al. ( | Canada | 22 | Resident physician (n = 17) | Hospital | Qualitative (interview) | April–June 2020 | Explore how residents perceive moral distress in relation to structural stigma during COVID-19. |
| Tate ( | United States | NA | Physician (n = 1) | Pediatric palliative care | Commentary | NA | NR |
| Wanigasooriya et al. ( | United Kingdom | 2638 | Nurses (n = 775) | Hospital (acute general and mental health) | Quantitative (cross-section, survey) | 5 June–31 July 2020 | Evaluate rates of clinically significant symptoms of anxiety, depressive and post-traumatic stress disorder and associated exposures and characteristics in HCWs following the first COVID-19 peak. |
| Whitehead et al. ( | United States | 19 | Nurse managers (n = 19) | Healthcare organizations | Qualitative (interview) | NR | Examine the moral distress experience of nurse managers. |
| Wiener et al. ( | United States | 207 | Nurses (NR) | Pediatric palliative care | Quantitative/qualitative (cross-section, survey) | 1 May–26 June 2020 | Explore the impact of COVID-19 on end-of-life care and the approach taken by providers toward bereavement care in pediatric palliative care. |
| Yıldırım et al. ( | Turkey | 17 | Nurse (n = 17) | Hospital (COVID-19 unit) | Qualitative (interview) | 27 May–25 August 2020 | Explore the experiences of nurses working during the onset of the COVID-19 outbreak in Turkey. |
| Wang et al. ( | China | 3006 | Physicians (n = 2423) | Hospital | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 27 March–26 April 2020 | Examine prevalence and correlates of moral injury in physicians and nurses in during COVID-19. |
| Ananda-Rajah et al. ( | Australia | 569 | Physicians (n = 331) | NR | Qualitative (open-letter with one free-text response question) | August–October 2020 | Explore the working condition and issues faced by HCWs during COVID-19. |
| Benzel ( | United States | NR | Healthcare workers (NR) | Hospital | Commentary | NA | NR |
| Butler et al. ( | United States | 61 | Physicians (n = 50) | Academic institutions, private institution, other | Qualitative (interview) | April–May 2020 | Describe the perspectives and experiences of clinicians involved in the institutional planning for resource limitation or patient care during COVID-19. |
| Cai et al. ( | China | 534 | Nurse (n = 248) | Hospital | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | January–March 2020 | Explore the psychological impact and coping strategies of frontline healthcare staff in the Hunan province. |
| Cheng and Li Ping Wah-Pun Sin ( | United Kingdom | NA | Physician (n = 2) | Palliative care | Commentary | NA | NR |
| Cheriyan and Kumar ( | India | 286 | Medical residents (n = 286) | Urology | Editorial (quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 21 June–11 July 2020 | Explore the impact of COVID-19 on the training and academics, clinical work, and personal life of urology residents. |
| Collado-Boira et al. ( | Spain | 62 | Medical students (n = 33) | Hospital | Qualitative (Interview) | March–April 2020 | Explore the perceptions of nursing and medical students during COVID-19. |
| Dewar et al. ( | Canada | 165 | Physicians (n = 165) | Hospital | Quantitative/Qualitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 3–13 April 2020 | Explore the preparedness and attitudes of physicians on resource allocation decisions. |
| Dhar and Wani ( | India | NA | Surgeons (NR) | NR | Commentary | NA | NR |
| Do Duy et al. ( | Vietnam | 61 | Nurses ( | Hospital | Editorial (quantitative, cross-sectional, survey) | 26–29 April 2020 | Measure the stigma experienced by HCWs after 3 weeks of quarantine and its association with mental health problems. |
| Elhadi et al. ( | Libya | 745 | Physicians (NR) | Hospital | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 18–28 April 2020 | Measure the prevalence of anxiety and depression in HCWs during COVID-19 and the civil war in Libya. |
| Evans et al. ( | Australia | NA | Healthcare workers (NA) | Palliative care | Ethics Rounds | NA | NR |
| Fawaz and Samaha ( | Lebanon | 13 | Nurses (n = 9) | Hospital | Qualitative (interview) | NR | Explore psychosocial effects of being quarantined following COVID-19 exposure in HCWs. |
| George et al. ( | India | 64 | Physicians (n = 20) | Urban slum | Mixed methods (cross-section survey, interview and focus group) | First 40 days of pandemic | Explore dilemmas, mental stress, adaptive measures, and coping strategies in healthcare teams providing healthcare services in urban slums. |
| Iheduru-Anderson ( | United States | 28 | Nurses (n = 28) | Hospital (acute care) | Qualitative (interview) | 15 May–20 June 2020 | Explore experiences of nurses working with limited PPE during COVID-19. |
| Kling ( | South Africa | NA | Physician (n = 1) | Hospital | Commentary | NA | Explore the duty of care and side-line guilt during COVID-19. |
| Koven ( | United States | 1 | Physician (n = 1) | Hospital | Commentary | NA | NA |
| Li et al. ( | China | 150 | Nurse (n = 107) | Hospital | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | 1-20 February 2020 | Examine the relationships between sociodemographic characteristics and anxiety and depression in frontline medical workers. |
| Liu et al. ( | China | 13 | Nurses (n = 9) | COVID-19-designated Hospital | Qualitative (interview) | 10-15 Feb 2020 | Explore experience of HCWs during early stages of outbreak |
| Mehra et al. ( | India | 88 | Medical residents (n = 23) | Tertiary care center | Quantitative (cross-sectional, survey) | April–May 2020 | Evaluate the prevalence of psychological issues in HCWs working in a tertiary care center. |
| Mohindra et al. ( | India | NR | Frontline healthcare providers (NR) | Tertiary hospital | Qualitative (interview) | NR | NR |
| Noreen et al. ( | Pakistan | 250 | Consultant (n = 40) | NR | Quantitative (cross-sectional survey) | NR | Explore the factors impacting psychological health and coping strategies of healthcare professionals during COVID-19. |
| Raza et al. ( | Pakistan | 12 | Physicians (n = 7) | COVID-19-designated hospital | Qualitative (interview) | 6-14 April 2020 | Explore factors that impede healthcare providers to effectively treat COVID-19 patients. |
| Reuben ( | United States | NA | Physician (n = 1) | NR | Perspective | NA | NR |
| Rezaee et al. ( | Iran | 24 | Nurses (n = 24) | Educational and medical centers | Qualitative (interview) | September–October 2020 | Explore perceived ethical challenges of nurses caring for patients with COVID-19. |
| Shanafelt et al. ( | United States | 69 | Physicians (NR) | NR | Perspective (focus groups) | First week of the COVID-19 | Explore the concerns of healthcare professionals, the messaging and behaviours they need from their leaders, and the sources of support they believe would be most useful for them. |
| Tsai ( | United States | 1 | Physician (n = 1) | Hospital | Commentary | NA | NA |
| Viswanathan et al. ( | United States | 130/57 | Attending physicians (n = 40) | Hospital | Perspective | Beginning March 28 2020 | Describe experience of providing peer support groups and individual counseling to HCWs that focus on issues and emotions related to their work during COVID. |
| Zolnikov & Furio ( | Global (primarily United States) | 31 | Nurses (n = 14) | NR | Qualitative (interview) | NR | Explore the stigma toward first responders during COVID-19 and its associated consequences on mental health. |