Authors
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Luigi Gagliardi, Serena Grumi, Marzia Gentile, Roberta Cacciavellani, Giulia Placidi, Angelina Vaccaro, Claudia Maggi, Beatrice Gambi, Letizia Magi, Laura Crespin, Graziano Memmini, Marcello De Filippo, Elena Verucci, Liliana Malandra, Laura Mele, Angelo Azzarà, Livio Provenzi -More
Category
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Primary study
Pre-print»medRxiv
Year
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2021
BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically affected healthcare professionals lives. We investigated the potential mental health risk faced by healthcare professionals working in neonatal units in a multicentre cross-sectional observational study.
MethodsWe included all healthcare personnel of 7 level-3 and 6 level-2 neonatal units in Tuscany, Italy. We measured the level of physical exposure to COVID-19 risk, self-reported COVID-related stress, and mental health load outcomes (anxiety, depression, burnout, psychosomatic, and post-traumatic symptoms) via validated, self-administered, on-line questionnaires.
ResultsWe analysed 314 complete answers. Scores above the clinical cutoff were reported by 91% of participants for anxious symptoms, 29% for post-traumatic symptoms, 13% for burnout, and 3% for depressive symptoms. Moreover, 50% of the participants reported at least one psychosomatic symptom. COVID-related stress (but not actual physical exposure) was significantly associated with all the measured mental health load outcomes, with a Risk Ratio of 3.33 (95% Confidence interval: 1.89, 5.85) for clinically relevant anxiety, 2.39 (1.69, 3.38) for post-traumatic symptoms, 1.79 (1.16, 2.75) for emotional exhaustion, and 2.51 (0.98, 6.44) for depression.
ConclusionsDespite a low clinical impact of COVID-19 in neonatology, neonatal professionals are a specific population at risk for psychological consequences during the pandemic.
KeynotesO_LIWe studied the mental health load (anxiety, post-traumatic, psychosomatic symptoms, burnout, depression) of healthcare professionals working in 13 neonatal units in Tuscany during the COVID-19 pandemic.
C_LIO_LIWe found very high levels of anxiety and psychosomatic symptoms, and moderate-high post-traumatic and burnout symptoms.
C_LIO_LIMental health load was higher in neonatal intensive (vs non-intensive) settings and in nurses (vs physicians). Mental health load outcomes were associated with COVID-related stress (rather than actual physical exposure to the virus).
C_LI
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license
Epistemonikos ID: 07a0f9430a94255959c2e023c62bf179c0e6d80f
First added on: Jul 02, 2021