COVID-19: What about the Mental Well-being Healthcare Workers?
The Covid-19 Crisis Too Few Are Talking About:
Health Care Workers’ Mental Health
Stat News
Jessica Gold
3 April 2020
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In the midst of this global pandemic, people are talking about
the urgent and critical need for personal protective equipment.
They are sharing concerns about the impending lack of respirators and
the need for testing. And they are
encouraging people to #flattenthecurve through social distancing. But
no one is talking about a potential mental health crisis facing health care
workers on the frontlines of this pandemic.
To an outside observer, health care workers look strong and
resilient in the face of the unknown. They inspire us as
they go to work every
day, at great personal risk, to keep others safe.
But, as a psychiatrist, I spend much of my life observing and
listening — I know that their calm surface appearance is the only armor they
have left. Underneath it, many health care workers are barely keeping it
together. They are anxious and they are afraid. They aren’t
sleeping and they find themselves crying more than
usual. The overall feeling in my friends, family, and co-workers is one of an
impending doom and an existing gloom that is both physically and
psychologically palpable.
We also know it is only the beginning. As such, it is my duty to
sound the alarm and try to protect their mental health — before it is too
late.
In truth, personal protective equipment is critical to
protecting health care professionals’ physical and mental
well-being. Without this protection, they worry that they will get sick and
infect others. Given that 20 of the 44 cases in
Philadelphia are health care workers, this is a reasonable
fear to have. The risk of infection, especially if it is asymptomatic,
instills fear of spreading the virus to their patients and families.
To lower this risk, many health care workers have decided
to socially isolate themselves.
Some have chosen to have their at-risk family members spend
time with relatives away from them and others have isolated themselves,
even within their own homes. This significant disruption in social support —
in the name of helping and protecting others — could go on for months. It is
also quite lonely.
These fears are further magnified when being quarantined because
of a positive Covid-19 test. We know from studies during the SARS epidemic that
quarantine has a serious effect on the mental health of health care workers.
It predicted symptoms of acute stress disorder, depression, and alcohol
abuse. Even three years later, quarantine was associated with post-traumatic
stress symptoms, which were, again, more severe in health care workers. As a
result, many experienced avoidance behaviors and sought to minimize contact
with patients. Some didn’t report back to work at all.
Health care workers are also concerned they might die from
Covid-19. This could seem like an irrational fear, but frontline health care
workers have died in China and Italy and in
the United States —
and this will only increase. Knowing this, some health care workers have
begun drafting living wills.
Some health care workers are using words like betrayal and
coercion and moral injury to describe this
experience. They feel betrayed by their employers, the health care system,
and the government, all of which were woefully unprepared for a pandemic and
then chose to ignore their warnings. Some are concerned they will be called
upon to do work they have not done in years due
to staffing needs. Even still, others are grieving the traumas they will see and
the decisions they will be forced to make. Some have said even they will
simply not come to work and would rather quit medicine all together.
These choices are not easy to make — between protecting oneself
and one’s family and doing one’s job — on top of the life-or-death decisions
they may be forced to make due to limited resources. It is no wonder they are
not sleeping, are anxious, or afraid. It
is no wonder that the preliminary research on coronavirus in China showcases
high rates of mental health issues, including depression, anxiety, insomnia,
and distress, which are much higher in nurses, women, and those on the front
line.
To support health care workers, experts need to intervene to
help protect their mental health, not just their physical health. This was
done in China and we
should follow their lead. Some universities, like UNC Chapel Hill and
the University of California, San Francisco,
have been leaders in this effort, deploying their psychiatric workforce as
volunteers. These approaches are comprehensive and multifaceted. They
consider the need for preventive measures (stress reduction, mindfulness, and
educational materials), in-the-moment measures (hotlines, crisis support),
and treatment (telepsychiatry for therapy, and medication if needed). They
also acknowledge that mental health treatment is not just something that
happens urgently or in crisis, but rather is something that needs to continue
and be available long into the future.
These changes cannot happen overnight. Our mental health system
is deeply flawed and understaffed and is in no way prepared to manage the
onslaught of mental health issues in health care providers and the citizenry
in general after such a mass tragedy. We must think about ways to prevent
mental health from deteriorating while also coming up with innovative ways to
target at risk groups, particularly health care workers. My friends and family,
and the people who are saving lives, cannot afford for us to wait. They could
die from the virus, or even from suicide. Mental
health cannot be an afterthought in coping with a pandemic.
It took far too long for us to start talking about how to
protect health care workers physically. Let’s talk about mental health now —
and do better this time.
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Jessica Gold, M.D., is an
assistant professor of psychiatry at Washington University in St. Louis.
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